<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14626" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14626?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T08:48:03+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45734">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/a029f5e516e5f529c3053d9602aadd8f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>caf22d4386a395cc0c634c5481172d00</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45641">
                  <text>~ Brown
:·

Thursday;, July 16,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-12-The Daily Sentinel

LOS GATOS, Calif. (AP )- Fruit

, flies spreading out of control
:·threaten California's $14 billion far: ming industry with virtual shutdown
· and the federal government should
: take emergency steps to help light
. them, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.

:· says.
.; Brown asked President Reagan on
~ Wednesday to declare three San
~ Francisco Bay counties a federal
·- disasier area after fruit nies were
: discovered 10 miles outside a regi on
· designated for aerial spraying with
the pesticide malathion.
Officials made arrangements to
widen the spraying area, and two
helicopters sprayed fine droplets of
sticky pestJcide-laced bait over a

populated area north and west ol
San Jose early today to kiU flies on
backyard fruit trees. Three other
helicopters were being prepared for
trips today, the third day of aerial
spraying.
"The increased magnitude of the
infestation constitutes a disaster
which is now beyond the control of
the services, personnel, equipment
and facilities" of the state and the
three counties, Brown said in a letter
to Reagan released Wednesday .
He asked for federal funds to help
pay for the eradication program,
which has already cost $23 million,
and he asked for low-interest loans
For residents from the Fanners
Home Administration and the Small

Business Administration.
The White House said it had not
received a copy of the Jetter, and
Brown said he had no indication that
help would be forthcoming.
Officials confirmed on Wednesday
thst maggots of the fast-breeding
pest had been found 10 miles mirth of
the infestation area in San Mateo
and to the east in Milpitas, as well.
In the first two days of pre-dawn
spraying of the pesticide malathion,
only 7t square miles were covered in
the the heavily populated infestation
area of more than 129 square miles.
The first night, a pump on the lone
helicopter broke down. The second
night. one of two helicopters used for
the spraying malfunctioned.

Officials had hoped to spray 45
square miles in two days and the full
area in a week.
The entire zone is targeted for at
least six sprayings of malathion, a
conunon garden pesticide which
many experts have said Is safe.

r;::=::::=~===::::::=::--'i

SeDate backs automatic :reductiOn

9~4B¥!!;t!HlU ·

feels government should help

.

WASHINGTON AP) ;...'lbe &amp;.enate, a~ one of
the JJ11111t ~ tax chl!.ncN In modem times over
Reacan adml!llstratioo · ~retervaUona, is backing
automatic aMual reductions In personal income taJ:es .
to off&amp;et the "bracket creep" cauBed Jiy lnfiauOO.
The "lndezing" provision, approved on a 57-40 vote .
Thunday, Is aupported In principle by,half the me)TIbers ol the House and liy President lteagan. But the adminlllratiog ·unsucci!ssfully sought to keep the lnclellln8 plan off the president's taHut bill. ·
Tbe ~ent, spo!lsOrecl by Sen. William L. Armstrong, It-Colo., would adjust personal tax rates, the
S1 ,000 i!ldlvldual exemption and the standard deduction to offset Inflation, starting in 11185.
For eumple, if inflation as measured by the Con-

Boys &amp; Girls

-•SHORTS •TOPS
•SHIRTS •SLEEPWEAR
.Boys &amp; Girls 3-24 Months

30% OFF

.

: Health-Tex
4001lO Off
INFANT WEAR ByCarter,
Tiny Tots

JEANS, SLACKS SETS

20% OFF
FLORIST

.

~

'

m

sumer Prlce.lndex
10•percent In 19114, the follOWing
year the exemption would be raised to $1,100, the S3',400
!ltandani deduction for a couple would be increased to
aboUt $3,7~ and rates would be reduced 10 percent
across the board.
'~'&gt;•
'n!at would cut taxes an estimated $37.4 hillion in
.1985.
With-the admlnlBtfation's support, the. Senate aiBo
apjmw~lr a major new Incentive for savings, aimed
~Y ·at sOlving the flnanc\Jil plight of the
horn!!bullding and savlngs-all4-loan ~es. It
would cost $8.7 billion fl'lllll1,a2 through 1985.
The new provision, which would allow a person to
earn $1,000 in tax-free interest from a special new one-

40% OFF

J52 E . Mai", Pomeroy

year savings cerllflcate, woUld beiieflt mainly people
with incomes abOve $30,000 ayear. It would be fipanced
In part by endlng,a cummt In~ esemptlon whl!)h iB
claimed wi~ly by I~ "'lddUe-ii!COme families.
The two BJPend{nents, and an uilrelated one affecting
Social Security, occupied th!i Senate until almost midnight Thuraday as It worked on Reagan's plan for- a ~
percent, acrosa-the-boanl cut In income-taJ: rates over
33 months, starting Oct. 1.
In the Houae, meanwhile, the Ways and Means Committee completed the first round of work on its own taxcut measure, which would reduce tax rates an average
of abOut 1~ percent over two years and target extra
relief tAl families with incomes under S50.000 a year.

e

Pomeroy, Oh.

111 W. 2nd

Your FTD FIDri: t

VOI.30, No.66

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

WOMEN'S SLACKS

Littl e boy s' and girl s' s iz es 6 mos . to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4
lo6x and 7 to 14 .
Good se l ection of kni ts and poly /c o11on bl end s 1n a n
ar r a y of summ er col or s.

On e rac k of women's slacks in belled or elastic waist
styles
Siz es 6 to 20.

REG. 13.50 .. .: .. .. .. ...... .. ....... ..... .. ... .... 'SALE
REG. 14.75 .......... ............ .. ............... SALE
REG. '6.00 ... .... ...... ........ ..... .. .. .. .. ... .. SALE
REG. 19.00.... .. .. .......... .. ....... .. .......... SALE

REG. '6.00 .. .. .. .. ................ .............. SALE 14.50
REG. 111.00 .. .. .. ............................. . SALE 18.25
REG. 119.00 ... .. .............. .... .. ..... .. ... SALE 114.25
REG. 125.00 ................................... SALE 118.75

2.45
1
3.32
1
4.20
'6.30
1

SELECT GROUP

CHILDREN'S

LITTLE GIRLS'

Includes sunsuits, pant outfits, coat and
dress sets, crawlers, sleepers and dresses.

lf2 PRICE
Sleepers, sunsuits and fancy outfits in sizes
NB to24mosand2to7.

1f2 PRICE
SALE

Designer jeans and poly/cotton
Sizes: 6 mos . to 24 mos. and 2 to 7.

knits
Tanks,
and
sleeveless styles in sizes
S-M -L and extra sizes.

REG. 18.00..................... SALE 15.60
REG. '12.00 ................... SALE 18.40
REG. 117.00 .................. SALE 111.90
REG. 123.00...... ,............ SALE 116.10

blends.

'

'

.

Boys Shorts
Men's Swim Trunks
Boys' Knit Shirts
Boys' Summer Jackets
Men ' s Shorts

Assorted patterns and colors of higher
priced towels. Light and dark colors . While
they last .

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

Our entire stock of summer spar ·
tswear is inc luded . Famous makes
like Dottv Mann, Cos Cob, Devon ,
Brad ley and Douglas Marc .
Misses and extra sizes.

REG. 112.00 .. ................ SALE '8.40
REG. 117.00................. SALE 111.90
REG. '24.00 ................. SALE 116.80
REG. 132.00 ................ SALE 122.40
REG. 145.00 .............. ..

ELBERFEbD

•
'•
•
•

Van Heusen Dress Shirts
Boys' Swim Trunks
Men's Summer Jackets
Men's Sport Shirts

Placket fronts, tanks and knits. Sizes 6 mos.
to 24 mos., 2 to 7.

REG. 13.50 .. .. .......... ,......._............... SALE 12.45
REG. '4.25 .. .................................. SALE '2.97 ·
REG. 15.50................................... SALE 13.85
REG. 17.50 .................................... SALE '5.25

Two ~ huti in Addison crash
Two Point Pleasant men were ,Injured in a one-cat aeciderit in SR 7
near Addison early Thursday.
Robert C. JohiiSOn; 5&amp;.the driver,
was not treated, but fl !)assenger,
Ralph Amburgey, ·31·, \Was _
taken to

SALEI 99•

ASH TRAYS

HAND TOWELS

Large Sizes- Amber or green color. Just 55
to sell.
Hous~wares 1st Floor.

BLOUSE SALE
. .

'

Short sleeved summer blouses
in sol ids and prints.
Sizes 32 'to 46.

Good selection of styles and
colors in sizes 8 to 20 and 32 to
38.

REG. '8.00 ........................ SALE '5.60

REG. sg.oo ........................ SALE ss.30
REG. '11.00 ....................... SALE 17.70
REG. '13.00. ................ .-......SALE '9.10

s·

'

''•

WOMEN'S

SHORTS

Holzer Medical Center by private
vehicle, where he was treated and
released for cuts and bruises to the
left forehead.
The Glillia-Meigs Post of the state

T

•.'

59~

WOMEN'S

OPEN SATURDAY
TIL
..

't . •

•
•
•
•
•

LITTLE BOYS' TOPS

REG. 14.50 .. ....... ... .. ... .. .. ........ ... ........ SALE 13.15
REG. '6.00.... .. .. .. •.. .. .. ... ... .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. SALE 14.20
REG. '8.50 · .... .. .. ·.... .................. ....... SALE 15.95
REG. 113.00 ...... .. .. ....................... .. ... SALE '9.10

WOMEN'S

MISSES TOPS

MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR

SPECIAL SALE- CANNON ROYAL FAMILY

LITTLE BOYS' OUTFITS

GETS
GREEN LIGIIT - The ·
future of the .Appalachian
Highway, an.tLiltbtr Ohio
road projec.ts were
discussed
at
the
Southeastern
Ohio
Regional
Connell
(SEORC) meeting ·at the
Falrgreens Country Club
in Jackson Thursday.
0001' Director David L.
Weir (bottom left) was
guest speaker, and posed
(above) with SEORC officers (from left) G. Kenner Bush, Athens, highway
use committee chairman;
Bob Evans, Rio Grande,
SEORC president; and
Carl Dahlberg, Wellston,
secretary. Work on the
highway In Adams and
Brown counties is expected to begin In the fall.
mGHWAY

REG. '6.00 ... ......... ......... ... ............. SALE 14.20
REG. '7 .50 .................. ................. .. SALE '5.25
REG. 111.00 .............. , .......... .......... SALE '7.70
REG. 116.00 .......... ........................ SALE 111.20

LITTLE BOYS' JEANS

SUMMER DRESSES

Highway chief
SEORC speaker

SAU PIIICES

REG. 15.00...... ......... .. ....... ................. SALE 13.50
REG. 17.00 .. ........ .... .. ..... .... ....... ........ SALE 14.90
REG. 1ll.OO ............ ................... .... .... SALE 17.70
REG. '15.00 .. ...... .... .... .... ..... ............ SALE 110.50

lf2 PRICE

f

Basic and fashion styles in straight or flare legs .
Size 6 to 24 mos ., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x and 7 to 14.

Gowns, pajamas, robes and short ies .
Sizes 6 to 24 mos ., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14.

Cotton cords and seersuck er . Not all sizes.
Limited quantity .

{

GIRLS' JEANS AND PANTS

SUMMER SLEEPWEAR

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

l.,

lf2 PRICE

Save 25%

PRICE
CHILDREN'S SHORTS

.i

Special group of long and short gowns
and robes, pajamas.
Sizes Petite thru X XL.

S, M, Land XL sizes. Excellent styles
for dress, casual and sports wear.

Y2

I

WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

REG. '9.00 .............. ,.... SAlE '6.30
REG. 114.00. :............... SALE i9.80
REG. 11~.00.:.............. SALE '13.30 _
1
REG. 122;00., ...............
. SALE 15.40.
'

'

ft· :W~:J7 •.• Iron'to'n,
.. ,,..., iiOuthbliurid ~ ~ ,11'75, four
•njl1la II!Uth Of SR l41, at'J:$0 p.m.

N

.

~Wlllll be 1.. Cobttol clf.lil~ Vehicle on

·~Ind.~ .. v
Hla Yt~ . , ~· 'severely~

~ ~ tlli.,.artlal_
d.

.

r

-

--;li--~-'---'-'=---'- -....,.,..;_~~--

,·,·

~~·

" .
·-·-- -.'{
:'
•

By KEVlN KELLY
JACKSON - All systems are apparently go on completing a threesection stretch ol the Appalachian
Highway in Ohio, the director of the
state department of transportation
said here Thursday night.
But David L. Weir reminded the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council
(SEORpl the same financial difficulties which plagued his department in previous years are stili very
real.
In a surprio;e move, Weir substituted at the annual meeting for
Clark Street, ODOT assistant director, who was the scheduled ~aker .
The project Weir discussed was
the recently approved stretch of the
highway through Brown and Adams
counties, which will be in partly paid
for by revenue from the new
gasoline tax.
The first stretch will go into construction later this fall, with 100 per·
cent state funding, Weir said. The
next part will be partly backed up by
federal matching dollars, and the
third will have to wait until next
year when another federal
allocation is granted.

.

-

.

Another part of the highway under
consideration is an expansion of U.S.
50 from Athens to Albany, presently
a tw()-lane road. Engineering work
on a wider right-of-way is in the
works, Weir explained.
Locally, plans for engineering
studies on widening of U.S. 35 from
G.allipolis to Centerville. and on the
Jackson bypass, are also in the
works.
Weir also reminded SEORC members several bridge projects are also
part of ODOT's worries, particularly
the Ravenswood bridge.
Weir said there are two alter·
natives to follow, to either repair SR
338 on the Meigs County side, or
build a completely new highway .
The latter choice could be 10 years
off before work could begin, he advised.

Short-term patching on 338 will
probably be the plan ODOT will
choose, he said.
Weir lauded the passage of the 3';,.
cent gasoline tax by the legislature,
which he said will raise $143 billion
this year in revenue.
He said the formula used in the tax

is unique, as its uses two indexes to
multiply from, the federal highway
index and last year's gasoline use
ratio.
" If you' re four percent more
i fuel) efficient, revenue will go up
four percent, '' Weir explained.
However, with the additional
revenue, ODOT's thrust will be to
maintain its present road system.
Weir estimated 76 percent of the new
revenue will go into paving, and
another $18 million is earmarked for
spot safety and thoroughfare improvements.
Nevertheless, even with the major
projects being worked on, Weir said
there is still a huge backlog of
smaller projects needing attention.
With only $230 billion anticipated
from the federal government in matching funds this year- a $30 biliion
decrease- ODOT is taking a waitand·see attitude.
·
"I feel it's important to waitfor an
act of Congress as to where to take
the federal program," Weir said .
"Let's concentrate on things withing
our grasp ... get one job done before
we have too many things in our
system. "

Re!Jgan assured of funding ·
WASHINGTON (AP) - With
House approval, President Reagan
is virtually assured of the $136 billion
he wanted next year to begin
rebuilding the nation's arsenal. Now
tbe Pentagon says it may need even
more money in 1983.
John Beach, plans director for the
Pentagon's
c omptroller .
acknowledged Thursday that an increase in the administration's
projected defense budget for fiscal
1983 is possible . But he said a
decision was premature because
Congress has not yet completed ac·
tion on the 1982 budget.
By a ~3 vote Thursday night,
the House approved the $136 billion
military authorization bill for 1982
and sent the measure to a con·
ference with the Senate, which had
passo.d a similar $136.4 billion ver·
sionin May.
Mter seven days of debate on
some 50 amendments, the Houseendorsed bill would allow the Pentagon to set aside in the fiscal year
beginning Oct. I abOut ~2.4 billion
for purchase of ships, planes, combat vehicles and other weaponry,
$63.3 billion for operation and maintenance expenses and $20.2 billion
for research and development work.
The total exceeds by neatly ~

highway patrol said Johnson was
northbound at 6:35a.m. when he lost
control of his vehicle on wet road,
went off the left side of the road and
hit a guard rail.
His auto was severely damaged.
The patrol cited a driver in a tw()car accident in Galli&amp; County Thursday afternoon.
The report said a vehicle driven by
Kathleen L. Chapman, 21, Gallipolis,
passejl another vehicle while westbound on SR 588 at 3:27 p.m. and
collided with an eastbound auto
driven by Shawna K. Lewis, 19, Rt.
3, GalUpoliB,
oamage was mOderate to both
c~ and Chapman was cited for iJn.
proper passing. .
.
Troopj!rs ,Investigated · a twovehicle colliBJon In Meigs County
'l'hursday morlling.
According the report, a southbound auto drivim by Mary J.
TalOOU: 39; Tuppers Plains, ~tl.ruck a
~ ·vehicle driven by !)oris
L. Hensler, 57, Rt. ~ Racll!e, when
they met on a hillcrest lin CR 28, one
inlles0\lth9f SR·MI; ~tt7:t5 a.m.
.
SUgbt ~ ,_ ·~ to
TalboU't· Yehlcle Wlille the Hensler •
auto- moelerateb' iamqjld.
. · .nooopeni ialcl.,dr'\yer ~In, Jury·In \ iJnii.clr 'lrrec:k In IIOidl!em
'' GaUla~ty~ aile"*-'·. ·

· : .Roilerlck

l

4

Appalachian highway
major SEORC topic

Great Savings Now On All Summer Clothing
For Everyone In Your Family
I

1 Section, 12 Pages
IS Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 17,1981

Copyrighted 1911

July Clearance Sale Continues

Adjustable size - good selection of styles
and colors - plus all of our summ er visors.
Reg . Price $1.69 to $3.95 .

'

Houae aDd Senate leaders want tAl. wi-ap up the tax
package and get It tAl Reagan before starting their
.August :oracation. That would ensure a smaU share of
the personal taJ: cuts in the last three months of this
year.
Armstrong said his Indexing amendment does more
to achieve faime&amp;'l in the tax laws than any other
provision of the tax-cut bill. "This was a vote for the
poor, the people and the dollar," he said.
Opponents criticized it as a surrender to inflation.
"This wtll Insulate one more group of our citizens
from the evils of inflation," said Sen. John Olalee, RR.I. "If we are ever to going to whip inflation .. .it is absolutely essential that all groups feel the pain."

HATS and BONNETS

PH. 992-2644

..

MEN'S SUMMER CAPS

.

billion the amount authorized for the
current fiscal year, which ends Sept.
30, and is within $400 million of the
money the administration said it
needed tAl begin rebuilding lile
nation's military might.
The authorization money would
push the total1982 defense budget to
abOut $220 billion, including funds
actually spent during the year.
Defense officials, meanwhile ,
have said Reagan's projected $254
billion defense budget for fiscal1983
may fall some $2 billion to $10 billion
short of what is needed to pay for
vast increases in military buildup
programs. The $254 billion estimate
was made only a few weeks after
Reagan took office Jan. 20.
"General discussion about a
possible increase" already is under
way , Beach said.
"We won't decide until about
November or December" whether a
7 percent "real growth" in the defense budget for fiscal 1983 will be
necessary, he said. By real growth,
he meant in addition to inflation.
A recent Pentagon interna I
memorandum sugvested that the
planned 7 percent real growlh in
defense spending over the coming
five years "does not permit the services to implement all the programs

planned earlier."
The memo suggested that the
target may have to be raised to 9
percent .
The Ho~. meanwhile, spent
nearly half of Thursday considering
- and then rejecting - amendments by liberal members that
would have forced Reagan to identify $8 billion in wasteful military
spending and would have prevented
the Selective Service . System from
acquiring the Social Security numbers of draft registrants.
Instead of requiring the $8 billion
in wasteful spending to be cut from
the Pentagon budget, the House
voted unanimously to require
Reagan to report by Jan . 15 on ways
to increase efficiency in the Defense
Department. The amendment also
would require the president to
describe the implementation of any
cost-saving recorrunendations by the
General Accounting Office.
Rep. Ted Weiss, D-N.Y .. failed by
a W.J25 vote in his effort to remove
provisions that could require young
men to give their Social Security
numbers when they register for the
draft and make registration lists
available to military recruiters.
Weiss and others contended that
(Continued on page 12)

�I

Pag~t--2- The Dally Sentintlf '1L
Pomeroy-Middl~rt, $ihl6 .
Friday, ,tulv 17•.19.1 ~
"· ·

Coritm,e ntary

f

dwelled at length on the concern of
the Reagan administration over the
appointment of four Communisis to
Mitterrand's Cabinet. The Staqte
Department professionals are
dismayed not because Bush ex·
pressed serious reservations about
the appointments to Mitterrand in
their private tw&lt;&gt;-and-a-half hour
meeting but because he repeated
those concerns in explicit detail at a
press conference.
Says the State Department observer: "By going public on French
television with the U.S. concerns
over Communists in the Cabinet,
Bush effectively backed Mitterrand
into a corner and got the issue of
U.S.-French relations involved with
Gallic pride . It was proper for Bush
to discuss the situation with the
president pnvately but selfdefeating to immediately voice
those
feelings
publi cl y .
Diplomatically, it was a serious

error."
It was not until after Laxalt a nd
Bush had met with Mitterrand that
U.S. Ambassador Arthur Hartman
held his first private meeting with
the new French president. Hartman
reportedly spent much of that
meeting explaining Bush's actions
and
answering
Mitt e rrand' s
questions about whether Laxalt's
Views were shared by the Reagan
administration.
Hartman , one of this country's
most experienced diplomats, had
been slated by the Reagan administration to become ambassador
to the Soviet Union. Word that he
was to be replaced in Paris by a
Republican businessman with no
foreign-affairs experience was also
unsetting to the French.
Now, as a measure of the administration 's growing concern with
the state of relations with the Mit·
!errand government, Hartman is to
stay in Paris for at least six more
months. Only then will he move on to
Moscow.
So, for most of the first year of the
Reagan administration, the United
States will not be represented by an
ambassador in the Soviet Union.
That does not help to get the ad-

Mergers:

One of the problems with today's
economy is that it's very hard to find
young people who are good
salesmen. Many students coming
out of college are more interested in
a customer's motivation than they
are in closing a sale. They also have
a tendency to be too honest, which
can play havoc in the retail business.
A friend of mine has a dress shop
here in Georgetown, and she told me
of the problems she had with a young
lady, a psychology major, whom she
hired as a salesgirl.
This, in essence, is what happened:
The first day a lady came in the
store, and the salesgirl (let us call
her Miss Brampton I asked if she
could be of help.
"I'd like a suit for the fall,' ' the
la dy said .
" What price range'" Miss Brampton asked.
" It doesn't make any difference,"
the lady replied.
" Well, let me ask you this
question : Do you want the suit
because you need it? Or have you
just had a fight with your husband,
and are trying to get even by making
a very expensie purchase?''
" I beg your pardon'" the lady
said .
"Perhaps you suspect him of some
infidelity, and you think thi;; is the
only way you can get back at him.··
" I have no idea what you're
talking about," the customer said.
"Spendmg money in anger is a
very ••pensive form of hostility. My
advice to you is to thmk it over for a
few days . Try to patch up your diffe rences. Buying a new suit won't
save your marriage ."
" Thank you very much, " the
customer sa1d frostily and left the
store.

have studied niergers, including his
predecessor.
Harold M. Williams, SEC cornmissioner during the Carter ad·
ministration a£ter having been
president ol Norton Simon Inc ., a
conglomerate. often wondere d
whether mergers diverted money

from more productive uses.

·

As they do now, small-business
people then found 11 hard to ra ise
funds to survive. And creative
people w1th sound ideas were unabl e
to raise financia l support to launch
new businesses.
There is nothing especia lly new
about this ; it is the test that entrepreneurs have always faced
But as criti cs have argued in
books, papers, testimony, speeches
and seminars, a country in which
productivity gains are increasingly
hard to get must be concerned about
innovation, efficiency, competition
and new jobs, areas in · which
smaller companies have much to
contribute.
fulther than accepting the view
that mergers are good, it would
seem that many questions are still
worthy of · being explored by the
Justice Department. the Federal
Trade Commission and Congress.
As the Reagan administration
says, big isn't always bad. This maybe especially so among oil companies, . which need enormous
amounts of capital to explore, build
refineries and compete internationally .

Ill Court ~lrf't"l

Pr&gt;mtroy. Ohio
111-"2-Ziii
DEVOTE DT0111E rNTEREST Of THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

WASHINGTON !API - So Max
Hugel IS out. Not many people ever
knew he was m as the CIA's spy
chief.
.
.
And the operatwn that led to h1s
resJgnatJOn was a sw1ft p1ece of
political surgery calculated to keep
1t that way .
.
Hours a fter The Washmgton Post
published accusatiOns by two
brokers tha t Hugel had engaged 111
1mproper stock market practices wh1ch he demed - Hugel, the CIA
deputy director for operatwns,
res1gned .
, .
_
Pres1dent Reagan s a1des sa1d the

govel'lll,llent and that Bush should
not have gone public with the
Reagan administration's concerns.
"So far It has been a totally
amateurish perfonnance and is
being viewed as such in the Quai

They say that Laxalt should not have
visited Mitterrand or at least should
not have discussed substantive matters, that Bush should not have _gone
to Paris until Hartman had been
able to lay a foundation with the new

"'She's angry with me now," Miss
Brampton told the dress shop owner,
" but in a week she'll be grateful!
talked her out of it."
My friend the shop proprietor
decided to let the incident pass; but
that afternoon another customer
came in, and Miss Brampton asked
if she could be or help.
The lady said, "I need something
really exciting. I'm going to the Kennedy Center, and I want a dress that
will knock eveyrone dead.''
Miss Brampton said, " We have
some lovely evening dresses over
here or insecure people ."
" Insecure people?"
"Oh, yes. Didn't you know that
clothes are one of the main ways

A_rt_B_uc_h-:-wa_ld

----!......_ _ _ _ _

"No," the customer said. "Your
women compensate for insecurity?''
girl
is right. Why spend $500 to gt a
. "I'm not insecure," the lady said
few compliments from people who
angrily.
"Then why do you want to knock really don't care what I wear?
them dead at the Kennedy Center? Thank you for helping me, young
Why can't you be accepted for your- lady , It's true I've been insecure all
self instead of what ou wear? You these years and didn't even know
are a very attractive person, and it."
The final straw for the dress store
you have an inner beauty you try to
owner
took place an hour later when
disguise. I· can sell you a new dress
that will attract attention, but then a coed came in to buy a holpants outyou would never know if it were you fit, and Miss Brampton gave ller 30
or the dress that made people stop minutes on women's lib and then
said, " All you do when you buy hotand stare."
By this time, the dress shop owner pants is become a sex object." ·
That night the dress shop powiler
decided to step in.
"Miss Brampton, if the lady wants put a sign in the window: HELP
an evening dress, le ther see our WANTED - NO PSYCHOLOGY
MAJORS NEED APPLY.
evening dreSses."

White House,dldn t p~t h1m mto the
CIA and d1dn t force h1m out. But the
message from Pennsylvama Avenue
to the suburban Virginia_headquar·
ters of the CIA w.as umrustakeable:
This one wasn t worth hghtmg
aoo,ut.
__
.
.
The a~;umstratwn 1s not embarrassed, _ spokesman ?av1d R.
Gergen _sa id after Hugel s abrupt
res1gnabon..
Hugel said he had not done
anythmg wrong.
But as any reader of spy novels
knows, undercover agents are ex·
pandable. Hugel was boss of the

fourth quarter of the next.
"That's
very
optimistic,"
economist Allen Sinai said of next
year's forecast.
While predicting inflation would
continue to decline, he suggested the
lower figure was "more of a goal
than a likely reality."
But Edward Yardeni, chief
economist and vice president of the
brokerage house of E.F. Hutton,
said, "It's doable."
The lower figure can be achieved,
he said, as long as the Federal
Reserve continues its tight control
over the growth of the money supply
and no serious weather problems or
other changes boost consumer
prices.
The inflation forecast was contained in the mid.year budget
review that also said lingering
double-digit interest rates will force
the govenunent to spend $10 billion
more next year than it had planned.
That would bring the total budget to
$704.8 billion in fiscal 1982, which
starts Oct. I. The deficit would be
$42.5 billion.

CIA's covert intelligence operations
worldwide. The appointment of a
businessman Reagan campaign
aide and to~ime friend of CIA
Director William J. Casey dismayed
career intelligence officials who
said the job should have gon~ to an
agency veteran in the first place. ·
Reagan said the right things.
Aides reported him saddened at the
accusations. "Once again we seem
to be taking an accusation as a conviction," the president said after
Hugel's resignation.
But deft staff work kept the Hugel

'

' 0')

Robert lrsay did in Baltimore," said
Rozelle.

22~

NFL owners voted
with six abstentions on March 10, 1980 to
prohibit a move by the fuliders . I.us
Angeles lost the Raiders to nearby
Anaheim after the 1979 season.
The vote was sought by Chuck
Sullivan of the New England
Patriots, a relatively unorthodox
procedure since a team planning to
move nonnally asks for the vote
Rozelle explained, "AI was
already making a move to Los
Angeles, a suit had been filed . We
were concerned that a court might
think the NFL was hiding behind a
technicality . There was no formal
expression of what his partners
thought.
"Should the Raiders be pennitted
to move? That's why the vote was
taken . We didn't want to have a
technicality that we had an opportunity to take a vote and didn't do

"

·FIESTA 3 DR HATCHBACK

Ghi.a •' Option ,

PB, N.D .. Package,

AMIFMIStereo,

tinted gla!s .. rear wiper washer, 40 mpg .

" Frankly, I DON'T CARE If Lady Diana is anly
going to love ana honor, but not obev Prince
G_harles. "
'

Now'5995
II

"O,;uj!:e Blucj!:rn,;s
Four"
Jimmy Walker- M.C.

SUMMER

SALES

1978 AMC CONCORD ••••••••••••••••• ••• 3495

1977 PONTIAC VENTURA •••••••••••••• •• 1995
1976 FORD GRANADA •••••••••••••••••••. 2195
1974 DODGE POWER WAGON •••••••••••• s1295
Auto, PB I P S
$1295
1974 FORD F250 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1975 FORD F250 CWB CAB •••••• :;.:~ s1395
1974 CHEVY MALIBU •••••••• :.d:.~~~;~~~ 51295
1975 DODGE CORONET••••••••••••••••• 51695
2dr ., hardtop AM / FM radi o, PB I P S. rl ir

1973 FORD LTD •••• ~, •.••••••• ~~~· •••••••• ~·. t
'Dr aut o, P B .. P S .. V&lt;ny l to p . $1695
1976 BUICK •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•cy l , , d r .. p .b . p s. r un; qood 11:95
1973 CHEVROLET ·························-~
I

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.
Ray Riggs 985-4100
9-5 Daily 9-1 Thurs. &amp; Sat.

Chester, Ohio

r.=======================================~

READY -ACCESS

FUND

Here's a unique opportunity for you to
earn high Interest on as little as $2 ..500
in just 89 days .
Our Ready-Ac cess Fund is a repur chase agreement bet ween you and
Diamond Savings. Quit e simply. we
transfer to you an interest in a U.S .
government (or government ag e n cy )
security. After 89 days . we repurchase
your agreement for what you originally
paid plus interest.

No peaaltiee or feee. Cance llation of
th e agreeme nt m ay be made anytime
after 14 days with total interes t ea rned
to d a te and no pe n a lties. And you don't
pay a brokerage fee to purchase the
Ready -Access Fund.

Ready-Acceee Fand from Diamond
Savtnga. W e' re leading the w ay for
save rs and investors to ge t more for
their money . Stop in tod ay. We'll h e lp

.BICb latereat rate. Interes t rat es are
determined dally by market conditions .
But. unlike money market funds. the
interest rate is fixed at th e date of pur·
chase for the term ofth,e agreement. You
may reinvest at maturity at the prevail ·
ing interest rate. Or we 'll transfer your
funds directly into a Diamond Pay -byPhone/NOW or other savings account.

•••tac•

aead)'·Aeceea r - • Ia aot a
aceo-t
or depoaJt aad Ia Dot iDeated., the Federal
8aftaC8 aad Loaala1ar~ee CorporatJea. See
4bcloeera atat••••t ler htll detaUa.

Toclay's rate:

13.5%

Sllort term. Your agreement matures
in only 89 days . 8500 minimum with·
drawals may be made anytime after I 4
· days, provided a 82.500 balance Is
maintained.

per annum

=

.,

'

(4,

'· }·

'

·~

.,

'

..

*
.,

.......,.leUm

Mounted - Balanced

(State Theatre)

I '

"'••

-·

---

you earn more. too!

-'(

-...._......

!

LOS ANGELES &lt;API - Com- dize other sections of the NFI. conmissioner Pete Rozelle of the stitution.
National Football League wants it
" I don't know the ramifications. If
known ttuit the' current court battle one rule is determined illegal, others
isn 't between him and Oakland might find something they don 't like ,
fuliders boss AI Davis.
said Rozelle . "The league is like a
"It's AI against his ?:1 partners," · string of beads. If one breaks, all
Rozelle told the Associated Press in I night go to the noor. "
an interview Thursday .
ln the in U.S. District Court battle ,
Rozelle referred to the 28 mem- all of the teams ca lled to testily have
bers of the NFL involved in the an- denied that Davis had an oral
titrust suit that Davis, managing agreement with Rozelle to move the
general partner of the fuliders, and fuliders .
the Los Angeles Coliseum have
The commissioner stated
brought against the league.
categorically , " I feel the Raiders'
There have been 10 weeks of contention of an oral agreement 1to
testimony and none of-the other NFL move to Los Angeles 1 has been efmember have agreed with Davis,
fective)y refuted by witnesses.
who claims he has the right to move · Whatever right he might have all
his Raiders to J he Los Angeles
would have. It would be an elemenColisewn, which was vacated by the
tary rule.
Los Angeles Rams when they mo\oed
Rozelle denied the Davis claim
to nearby Anatreim in 1980.
that he had asked for help in
In the interview, Rozelle was
renegotiating a contract with the
. Raiders Oakland l:ollseW!D,~'

-!.209--s",,

HOUSE

'J

• LI!'ITEM OP OPINION oft • -· Tllq 1111a1o1 be leu 11101 . . • - 1'"1, AD
lftltn are ••~ .. edtUIIIIMII -•1M 11ped wl• ....,, llldral ... 1elepltoM .ambeT. No
ril be ............ Leu.n...,.... be 1o ,_. lolto, - l • l

singles for Bidwell . Tonight,
SYRACUSE Major league Charlie Sullivan each added singles.
Syracuse will play Cheshire in the
baseball may have come to a Snyder, Bill Swisher, and Jeff Mcopener at 7 p.m. and Albany's Far"striking" halt, but America 's Call each singled.
mers meet Pomeroy Powell's at 8:15
favorite pastime continued with a
In the finale , Pomeroy's Pirates
p.m.
competitive edge Thursday evening rolled to a 5-3 victory over highly
Monday Rutland will ptay Mason's
during the Syracuse Little Le~gue touted Bidwell. Pomeroy edged Bidfulngers in the first game, then
Tournament. Four teams advancing well7-5 in the hit colwnn.
Gallipolis's Padres play the to the third round of play included
Huey Eason picked up the triumph
Pomeroy Pirates in the second
the Galtipolis Padres, Albany Far· with nine strikeouts and three walks.
game. Only two games are
mers, ·Pomeroy Pirates, and Mason T. Holstein !anne(! 11 and walked
scheduled each night.
fulngers. All scored hard-fought vic- three in a great individual effort.
At 6 o'clock Friday evening, a
tories in the final day of second
Brian Freeman and Greg Fields
special dedication will be given to
round action.
each singled twice for the winners,
Bill Hubbard in appreciation for his
Two shut-outs and two squeakers while Phil King, Gerald Moore, and
work, organization, and continuing
highlighted the competitive action Dave Hendricks each singled. R.
exhibited by the local youth.
Jackson, M. Jackson, R. Welch, S. support of baseball and youth
A large crowd turned out to watch Glassburn, and P . Hurt each added
progrannsinthearea.
the Gallipolis Padres roll to a convincing 4-0 win over Glouster Burr
Oak. Both clubs collected four hits,
but the Padre hits were more opportune.
D. Hively posted the victory with
nine strikeouts and three walks,
while Birch suffered the loss . He had
a good night, striking out eight and
walking six .
K. Brown had two singles, S.
Talbert a home run, and Hively a
single for the winners. S. Birch and
-...... ................. cils;l1g
s
D. McKee singled, while J. Bycofski
tripled and singled.
In another thriller, th e Albany
Fanners edged Gallipolis ' White
Sox 3-2. Albany collected live hits
enroute to the win, while Gallipolis
banged out four safeties.
Mark Chapman was the winning
hurler with II strikeouts and seven
walks . K. Lucas suffered the defeat
with eight strikeouts and five walks.
Chapman singled twice, while T.
Jenkins and Jack Gilkey each added
singles. Lucas doubled and tripled
for Gallipolis and Barnett singled.
The Mason fulngers blanked
Murray City 4-0 in another well- t---'------'-----~&lt;-------------­
played contest. Mason focused its
hitting eyes for eight hits, while
Murray City was held to three
safeties.
5
Brian Decker was the winning
DL 'J dr H . T .. am tm rad10. 4 cy l. . w / n1r . rf'd w l ~ cl ll 'tiny I to p
hurler, posting 15 strikeouts and just
five walks in going the distance.
~ 5
John Snyder had eight strikeouts
and three walks on the mound for
5
Murray City.
P B .. P . S. , A. C , v 1ny I t op good and d r~rk qre L' rl co lot
Mason hitters were Troy Tucker
with three singles, while Harry
Henry, Billy Marshall, Decker, and

OSAGE OPRA

It's AI against the world

.•
,•
.••

A MEMBER ol Tilt Auodlted Pttu, lallad DIUy Pret1 A&amp;Hc!LIUH 1Dcl dtt
Amerkaa Ntwtpiper PllbUiben AIMNIIH.

iiii,J.

pensation and the players accepting
levels of compensation lor twothirds of eligible ranking free agen·
l•.
" You reach a point," said Miller,
"when you get a feeling nothing will
happen to solve the issue through
negotiations. The events of yesterday (Wednesday) and today !Thursday I were convincing that this will
not be resolved through
negotiation ."
So Miller suggested the ar·
bitration route, something both sides
had previously rejected. But Grebey
wouldn't buy the proposal , calling it
"a public relations ploy."
Miller said the owners also asked
that as part of the deal the union
drop its charges of unfair labor practice, which were tried by the
National Labor Relations Board
bel ore an administrative Jaw judge r-;;;~~~~~:;;:;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;:;:;1
last week .
I
The players association rejected
the owners' package, wliich Miller
said still called for direct compensation and was not substantially
different than the proposal the
owners have had on the table
SHOW TIME 8:00 P.M.
throughout this labor crisis.
SATURDAY ONLY
At the same time, the players offered to adjust the level of comFeaturing
pensation provided in a proposal
"Tom And The
submitted to the two sides by Moffett
last week. That proposwl had been
f:ountq· Strunj!;crs"
accepted by the union and rejected
by management.
ALSO

·'•

NewoEdil« '

."

Thurs4lty night. He called the
walkout: "a strike against the
Ameri~~n P.,ople, from one point of
view," and said he would " try to be
the vo~¢e of the American people I
think has been missing at that
1bargaining ) table."
Frustrated after· five weeks on
strike, the player~ association offered the arbitration route a s a
possible solution to the walkout, now
in its 36th day. The strike, which
began June 12, has canceled 419
games, nearly io percent of the lull
major Jea11ue season, and forced
postponement of the AU-star Game
last Tuesday night. But the Player

Relations . Committee, bargaining
ann of the owners, turned down the
arbitration idea.
Donovan said that Miller, head of
the players' WJion, and Grebey,
chief negotiator for the 26 major
league club owners, " will be at a
meeting in my office separately for
conversation " and added that he
was "still optimistic that over the
weekend they'll be able to get this
thing back on the table."
"I think Washington would
.provide a better atmosphere for the
talks," said federal mediator Kenneth Moffett. " Several things can
happen in Washington. For o~e
thing, we can get away from this
press business. I don't like the two
sides reading all the papers across
the country before showing up to
bargain each day. We've been
negotiating in a fishbowL"
Donovan emphasized that he will
discuss with Miller and Grebey
"exactly what has to be done," adding, " Hopefully, we can get the entire bargaining group back at the
table on Monday."
Both sides made proposals Thursday which they said were aimed at
ending the walkout. But each side
rejected the other's ideas and the
. bargainers seemed at a dead end.
There had seemed to be
movement on significant issues with
the owners shuffling numbe"S in
their proposal on free agent com-

.•

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

:.:;:,-; ;-.:..1c ;~ ~S P r~1~

the players' assodallon's rejection of the latest
proposal to end the baseball strike put forth Thursday
by negotiators for the club owners. I AP Laserphoto).

Fruitless diamond talks
will move to Washington

episode away from Reagan and the
White House doorstep. Ad·
ministration aides had been looking
into the case for four days before the
accusations were published. Reagan
was told of the accusations against
Hugel ~te Monday and got word he
had resa!llled Tues4&amp;y morning.
The White H~ Hne was that
Hugel was Casey's man, and that the
resignation was a decision reached
at the CIA after discussions between
the two. The New York Times
quoted a Reagan ai!le as saying:
" Hugel was Casey's choice, Casey's
buddy and Casey's problem."

Publl1her

~ -i, : ~~-..

NO GO - Bob Borne of tlie Philadelphia Phillles
looks o~ wblle Doug DeCinces of the .Baltimore Orioles
speaks 1o reporters In New York Thursday following

'

GeDHII MllloiJf'r

•

ALL PASSENGER SIZES

_,
'10.

Berry's World--__,

BOB HOEFLICH

"

Dai!Y Sentinel-Page-3

The

RETREADS

worth major battle

ROBERT L, WINGETI'
PAT WHITEHEAD
AHliCaat·PiablilbnJC..tronn

.

d'Onlay/' says the State pepa,t.
ment with the new Sc!claJIBt II!Wtl'llment in Frai!_Ce is bein8 ~ wa~
ched all over Europe, and ~ 1111
to a start like this Is IIQl ~ey •belpful."

£rom there, " Donovan se:~id in an interview :wl~, Enterprise fuldio late

was~ 't

.

1

Shutouts mark tourney play

NEW YORK lAP ) - The Reagan
Administration, billing itself as the
voice of the American people, has
stepped into the major league
baseball strike following another
day of fruitless negotiations in which
each side rejected propoals made by
the other.
Shortly after the club owners
rejected Thursday night a union
proposal that the entire issue be tur·
ned over to final and binding arbitration, U.S. Secretary of Labor
fulymond Donovan invited both
sides to h1s Washington office today.
"I finnly believe Mr. !Marvin)
Miller a,nd Mr. lfulyl Grebey will be
in W:p~hington at my office
tomor*.IFndayl and we'll take it

Prediction said
• • •
too optimistic
WASHINGTON I AP I- President
Reagan's latest prediction that inflation will slow to 6.2 percent ne•t
year appears overly optimistic,
severa l private economists contend.
"That errs a bit on the side of optimism," said Thomas D. Thomson,
senior v1ce president and chief
economist of San Francisco's
Crocker National Bank.
"Once we have had this disease as
badly as we have for the past 15
years, it doesn't go away that
quickly, " he said. "It takes a long
time to erode the inflationary e•pectations" ol consumers, business
executives and workers, he said.
Inflation, as measured by the consumer price index, was 12.6 percent
last year, and the administration's
forecast Wednesday placed this
year's inflation at 8.6 percent, dipping to6.2 percent in 1982.
Those ligures were revised down·
ward from earlier forecasts of 10.5
percent this year and 7.2 percent in
1982. The ligures are a measure of
the percentage change from the
fourth quarter of one year to the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Bob Wagman

The soft sel..__I___

This one

good, bad
NEW YORK 1 AP I - Mergers
generally produce a net economic
gain , the SEC chairman sa1d, and he
offered as evidence the sizable
premiums often paid to
shareholders of the company being
acq uired .
John S.R Shad, who recently took
over the top job at the SEC, more
formally known as the Securities
and Exchange Commission, said
nothing about the other part of the
deal - about those who pay the
premiwns .
As most shareholders know, those
premiums come out of the buyer's
equity . which. of course, is the
shareholder's equity. There is no
such thing as a deal in which you pay
dea rly but suffer no added expense.
Moreover , with interest rates e• tremely h1gh , any money borrowed
to finance a merger comes at a very
high price - a price that may further dilut e the equity of
shareholders in the acquiring company.
You don't have to be an SEC chairman to test this interpretation . In
the stock market, which is supposed
to represent s ome collective
wisdom, shares of the bidders in a
takeover contest often fall, while
those of the company being sought
rise, often spectacularly.
Mergers are healthy for the
economy, said the conunissioner,
fanner vice chairman of E.F. Hutton &amp; Co. But the commissioner's
certainty is not shared by all who

ministration off to a steady start in
its relations with the Soviets.
Members of the foreign-policy
establishment say that it will take at
least six months of effort to get
relations between the United States
and France back on an even keel.

..

.•

Amateurish ·performanc
WASHINGTON (NEAl - "We
have really screwed it up." So says a
longtime member of the U.S.
Foreign Service regarding a subject
of much concern these days around
the State Department: U.S .
relations with the new Socialist
goverrunent of France. (This expert
on European affairs agreed to speak
"on backbround" provided his name
was not used "because they are leak .
crazy around this place these
days.")
Professionals at the State Department are upset both at the tone and,
especially, at the unofficial, "backchannel" manner in which the
Reagan administration has gone
about establishing relations with the
government of President Francoos
Mitterrand.
They are particularly distressed
that Mitterrand's first significant
contract with a high-level U.S. official came about not through
regular diplomatic channels but
though an overseas junket by Sen.
Paul La•alt, R-Nev ., one of
President Reagan's closest friends
and confidants.
LaKalt was part of the official
delegation that attended the annual
Pans Air Show. The senator a nd
some friends and family mem bers
then took a side trip south to the
Basque region from wh1ch his parents had emigrated.
The trip, which was wellpublicized in the French press and
covered by a French television
crew, came to the attention of a
member of the Mitterrand government who was hosting the new
president at his villa in the region.
He invited Laxalt to pay a brief call
on Mitterrand.
La&lt;alt did, and what was s upposed to be a five- to 11)-minute
"courtesy call" turned into a 90minute discussion of U.S.-French
relations and the views of the
Reagan administration as translated by La•alt. The meeting was
followed by an impromptu news conference given by the senator to the
French television crew.
Then·came the visit to France by
Vice President George Bush, who

FridaY,, Juty 17,1981

DIAMOND SAVINGS

.....
.
-1981 '

\

:

AND LOAN CONPANV
We dare you to compare!
216

w. Main St.

Pomeroy,

992· 6655
Mon. · Wed . 9· 4, Thur. &amp;
Friday 9· 6

Sat. 9-Noon

'

'

~.
Ohio

•'
•
.,•'

J\ . '' .. , • .

i

jl

-~

'

..

'·
,Jo.

�•
Friday, July 17,1911
':Page=4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

i'

Nicklaus fires worst round ever
in British Open Golf tournament
SANDWICH, England i AP 1 - Since the British Open golf championship began in 1860, there never
a first day like this.
Nobody broke par.
Jack Nicklaus, a three-time champion, shot 83 - his worst round in 20
British Opens - after hearing that
his son Steve had been charged with
drunken driving back in Ohio.
Tom Watson, defending champion, predicted the title may be won
with an unprecedented total of 6overpar.
And amid a ll the high scoring in
the shifting winds, 51-year-old Arnold Palmer lost an argument with
officials over a free drop and
probably was robbed of a share in
the lead.
The 6,829-yard Royal St. George's
links lived up to its reputation as a
terror for golfers unfamiliar with
the hump-backed fairways. invisible
bunkers and winds that blow in from
Pegwell Bay.
Only two of the !53 players, Vicente Fernandez of Argentina a nd Nick
Job of Britain, made par 70. They
shared the lead, with six men one
stroke behind them - Johnny Miller
a nd U.S. Amateur champion Hal
Sutton of the United States. U.S.
Open winner David Graham of

was

Australia, !sao Aoki of Japan, Simon
Owen of New Zealand and Tony
Jacklin of Britain.
AU the top players had predicted
the course would be difficult, but
probably none of !hem expected it to
be as tough as this. The pins were
awkwardly placed, the wind differed
from hole to hole and the greens

were slow.
At the center of the drama was the
tragic fi gure of Nicklaus, who has
never fin ished outside the top six in
the last 15 years.
Few of the 19,000 fans who lined
the undulating fairways knew of his
family worries. All they saw was a
great golfer making a mess of hole
afte r hole. At the turn, with one bir·
die a nd fiv e bogeys, he was at 39,
fo ur over par.
But worse was to come. On the first fiv e of the inward nine he had four
double bogeys and a bogey.
Nicklaus sa id afterward he had
talked to his son on the phone.
" I'm not greatly excited by what
has happened. but it had nothing to
do wtth my performance," he said.
" There has to be one da y when you
shoot the worst round of your life."
Watson double-bogeyed the fir st
hole after twice hitting into heavy
rough. He finished with 73. Tha t left

.,..,.,.....

,~: .

...., • .-:1-·

1"' '"

him three strokes off the pace.
Palmer posted a 72, and it would
almost certainly have been 70 if he
had not run into a bizarre situation
at the 15th and had a double bogey
six.
Palmer's second shot ra n through
the green a nd down a slope to a flat
area close to the spectators' stand.
He found he had no room to swing his
club.
He claimed a free drop, under the
rules of go if.
Officials sa id he could have it, but
must drop his ball in the nearest approved drop a rea. Paliner found the
area a mass of long grass and
decided to play from where he was.
He went through the green again and
had to chip back.
Palmer was Britis h Open champt oll m 1961 a nd 1962. Last week he
won the U.S . Senior Open championship.
He diplomatically turned
newsmen's questions aside, but
finally said he thought the ruling
wa s unfair.

" I don't thmk you should be
penalized because you are in an unplayable area that is part of the putting a rea." Palmer said. " That's all
I'll say a bout it."

Williams blanks Pawtucket
By The Associated l'ress
Rick Williams, working nearly all
the innings for Toledo. allowed no
runs despite II Pa wtucket hits as the
Mud Hens beat the Red Sox 1-0 in In·
tcrnational League baseball.
In other II. action Thursday mght ,
Richmond stomped Charlston 7-5,
Sy racu'" beat Columbus 5-3 and
Ttdewater s pilt a doubleheader wtth
Rochester, the Tides winning the fi r·
st 3-2 and the Red Wings the second

5-4.
Williams left after 7 2-:l inmngs
following Roger LaF -rancots' double
with two out in the eighth . Glenn
Dooner relieved for the final out.
" I had a little luc k," Williams
said. " It was one of those games
where you kind of battled all the
way .
Ron Wa shmgton 's siXth-inning
s ingle drove in the game's winning
run
Richmond 7, CharlestonS
Rtchrnond outscored Cha rleston
as both teams pounded out 1:1 hits .
Richmond started the scoring in
the second when Steve Ha mmond 's
si n~Jedrov e home Larry Whisenton.
who opened the second wtth a triple . ·
The Braves added three in the third
innmg . climbing to a J.1J after
scoringthree runs in the fifth .
Charleston jumped on pitcher
La rry McWilliams fur fi ve runs in
the seventh mning.
Richmond's .Jose Alvarez fmished

the game but not before Ken Barton
singled horne two runs and Chrlli
Bando hit a sacrifice fly to drive in
the Charlies' fifth run . Alvarez got
his fifth save of the year as McWilliams improved hts record to :i-9.
The losing pitcher was starter
Gordy Glaser, 54.
Syracuse 5, Columbus 3
Syracuse never tra iled as Tony
Fernandez a nd Dave Baker belted
homers a nd pitcher Larry McCall
notched his second vtctory of the
season . The victory lifted the Chiefs
out of the cellar. but the rema in 18
games be hind leag ue-lea ding
Columbus .
Clippers sta rter Brian Ryder , who

four innings . suffered the loss. He
now is 0.3 .
Tidewater 3-4, Rochester 2-S
Floyd Rayford belted a tw&lt;)-run
home run in the bottom of the sixth
i11ning to give Rochester a 54
second-game victory and a
doubleheader split with Tidewater.
Jesus Vega rounded the bases on a
series of Red Wing errors to give the
Tides a 3-2 win in the opener.

~ave

was the loser .

up all five SyractL&lt;;C runs in

Rayford's

homer

overcame

a

Tidewate r lead established by a
Vega homer in the top of the sixth .
Rayford 's RBI double in the fourth
had tied the game .
Larry Jones, 7-l!, took the win in
the second game. Dan Boitano. 4-:i,

Girls claim top honors
Two Me1gs County girls d a amed
top honors last weekend here at Ohio
Stadiwn. during track and fi eld
competition in the Ohio TAC Junior
Olympi cs. Meigs High School stand·
outs Kristin Anderson and Andrea
Ri!(gs. won State Championships in
the cornpetiliun and now bot' • will
advance to the United States
Regional TAC Championships on
July !Sand 19 at lndtana University,
Bloomin~ton. Ind . Kriston won the
800 meter run and Andrea won the
high JUmp title .
/

The Jumor Olympi cs is a Natwnal
Track a nd Field Competition held
every swnrner fur five age groups .
The !(rouping is as follows: 10 and
under , boys a nd girls ; 11·12. boys
and girls: 13-14, boys and girls ;, 1516. boy s and girls; 15-16, boys and
~iris: and 17-18. boys and girls.
Everyone is e ligible to compete as a
member of a track or Athletic Club
or as an mdtvtdualt unattached!.
Kri stin and Andrea entered the
competition as unattached runners
smcc there are no track clubs in the
area. They have cnntinued tn work
out smce the end of school. Kristin
runs at home while Andrea practices
htgh jumping at Meigs High School.
Last spring Kristin and Andrea
were members of the successful
Metgs Girls ' track team. Both girls
were SEOAL champions and Sectional champions.
The Nati onal Champtonships will
be July 31 through August 2 al the
University of Nebraska, Lincoln ,
Neb .

Srioto Downs

rt· ~ults

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP 1 - Best
Kmd. driven by Rick Oldfield, won
the eighth featured race in 2: 00 .3
Thursday a t Scioto Downs, paying
$4.80,$3.20 and $3.
Trespasser's W. finished second
for $4 and $4 .20. and Abes Geri was
third for $6.60.

)

ADV,\NCE - Krislln Anderson, lefl, and Andrea Riggs recenlly won
slate championships at the Ohio TAC Junior Olympics. They will compete
in the US Regional TAC Championships this weekend al Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind.

T·BALL TIGERS- Members of the Middleport T· Jamey Utile, Bobby Jolm!lon, Jamie Reeves, Rusty
Ball Tigers are, front row, from left to right, Sherry Capehart, J . c. Creameaos, and Adam Utile. Coaches
Johnson, Abby Blake, Brei Newsome, Willie Johnson, are Bob Johnson and BHI Capehart.
J . P. Davis, Ricky Gilkey and Tony Davis. Back row,

Summer league results. • •
In girls' senior softball , Pomeroy
swept two games from Waterson 1:13, and !(1.9 respectively.
In the first game, Pomeroy rolled
to a 13-3 win with K. Rought picking
up the win . She walked one and
allowed nine hits. Whitman s uffe red
.the loss with nne walk , while
allowing 15 hits.
For the winners Beth Glockner
doubled and singled, Jenny Bentley
singled three times, Lori Pickett
singled , Andrea Riggs singled twice,
Denise Stegall singled twice, Kellie
Rought singled twice, and Angie
Hatfield, Barb Grueser, and T;resa
Pratt each sing!ed .
For Waterson, Birchfield doubled
and singled, Somerville, Thomas
singled twice. and Logan, Smith,
and White each singled.
In the second contest Pomeroy
edged Waterson !(1.9. K. Rought wa s
the winning pitcher, and Whitman
the loser.
Andrea Riggs hit a horne run and
singled to lead the wmners. Paula
Swindell doubled and singled , Mary
Moore a nd Angie Hatfield singled
twtce. while J enny Bentley, Barb
Grueser, and Rought each singled .
Fur Waterson, Atkins doubled and
tripled, Smith doubled. Sornervtlle
doubled, and Birchfield tripled.
Atkins, Wh1te, a nd Whitman each
doubled, while Logan, Birchfield,
and Smith singled.
In the j un ior girls' lea g ue
Salisbury defeated Middleport's
Panthers 7-4 . behind winning pitcher
Barb Hatfield . .Julie Hysell s uffered
lhe loss. Salisbury hitters were
Carla King with a double and twu
stngles. Jodi Harrison two s ingles.
Rhonda Zirkle a triple and a single,
Bar b Hatfield two singles, and Kim
Eblin a single. Jenifer Couch. April
Brickles, a nd Darla King each
singled.
Hitters for Middleport's Panthers
were Samantha Roush with two
singles, while Julie Hysell, Kim
Stewart, Carrie Karr, Belinda
Smith, Kr istie Richmond . and Julie
Roush each added singles.

Salisbury's Jodi Harrison, Ma rie
Musser, Kim Eblin, and Barb Hatfield were credited for some out·
standing defensive play .
Middleport is now 4-3 and
Salisbury lf&gt;ll. Salisbury rolled to
another 1(1.3 win over Mason as Barb
Hatfield again picked up the win . L.
Camp suffered the loss. Despite the
loss Camp fanned 10 batters.
Hitters for Salisbury were Rhonda
Zirkle with two singles , Carla King a
double, and Kim Eblin, Maria
Musser singles. Hitters for Mason
were M. Sisson, A: Lavender, J .
Chandler each with singles.
In first round action of the Middleport Pee Wee girls' softball tournament, Pomeroy defeated Middleport's Dusters !S-9. Then the
Dusters claimed an S-7 win over the
Middleport Midgel,.
In second round action , the Mid·
dleport Midgers posted a 15-6 win
over Pomeroy, then Pomeroy came
back to bea t Middleport's Dusters
l:i-3 . In the semi-final round the Middleport Dusters defeated the Middleport Midgets 2~ . In the championship game, Pomeroy Jim 's Gulf
dropped a 13-11 decision to Middleport's Midgets.
For Pomeroy T. Wright and M.
Woods each tripl ed, while D. Henderson, Woods, Bentz, Haggy, Kenda Klocs, H. Wood and T. Wright
each added singles. Stobart and
Gepell added three s ingles.
For lhe winners, Jody Taylor
doubled and singled twice, S. Cassell
doubled and singled, Whitlatch
doubled and singled and Plants
singled twtce. Butcher, Baker, McFarland , Carsey, Gilkey, and
Cassell singled.
Salisbury picked up two more vic·
tories with a 19-0 win over New
Haven and a 10-4 victory over Letart
to boost its record to 12-j), Against
New Haven Barb Hatfield picked up
the win with six strikeouts and four
walks. Hoffman s uffered the loss
with three strikeouts and seven

Super sprint cars take track

walks.
The hard hitting and good defensive play of Salisbury combined for
19 runs and a shutout over New
Haven . Salisbury hitters were Hatfield with two triples and two
singles, Kim Eblln a home run and
three singles, April Brickles a
double and two singles, Rhonda
Zirkle a double and single, Jodi
Harrison two singles and Patty
Davis two singles, Tammi Eblin added a single. New Haven hitters
were Frye, Hoffman, and Sayre.
Salisbury collected only nine hits
to score 10 runs to defeat Letart.
Salisbury, however, hit the ball very
hard and handcuffed Letart on
several occasions. Salisbury's excellent defense stopped a would-be
charge by Letart when shortstop
Maria Musser went deep behind
third to grab a fly ball and double the
runner off first. Salisbury hitters
were Carla King with a triple and
two singles. Other hitters were
Maria Musser, Jodi Harrison, Kim
Eblm, Barb Hatfield, Jennifer
Couch. Rhonda Zirkle and Darla
King .
Letart hitters were Tracy Beegle,
Melinda Hill, Carol O'Brien, Alana
Lyons, Roberta Green, Lori Adams,
.Jodi Harris, Karla Smith, Mandy
Hill, and Kenda Rizer. Letart is now
6-4 .

The lhily

Sent inc!

IU~~ 14~9lilt

A Oi\·lslun of Mu\Umt'"dla, I at.
l' ubh s lll'd l'\'t•ry aHcrlliiUI\ , Mondi:ty through
t• nday, Ill Cuurt StrL'·c l, by the Ohiu \I Miley
Publi:-;hml! Culllpllll)" · Multimedia, Inc.,
l'u•m·ru,·. Oluu 457S9, m-2156. SecurKI cl~s.'l

1-..t..Lag•· -~~&lt;tul at P~~1 1 1cror. pt1i u . . .

Mt·m!JI•r : Till' A s.~ut 'lalt'tl Prt•ss, lnbmtl Daih · F'ra;s 1\s.o.;u..:ia\iuu a mi tht· Ameri can
N,-.,.,spotJit'l" Pulll ls ht·rs A:-;su~..- u:tliun, NaliOI\111
Ad vt•r\1 :-. 1111-! Hcpn·scnltlli VC , Bnmham
Nt·wsp.apt•r S:tlt•s. 7:1:1 Third Awnuc, New

Yurk, Nt•w Ynrk 1001"1 .

POSTM A.."'TEU : S..·ntl addrcs.o,; tu The DHily
St•!tlillt' l. Ill Cu11 rt .&lt;;t.. Pllllltruy, Ohio t:;769.

SUKS(;KII'TION RATI':S

Hy (.' • rrkr ur Mttt.or Routt·
0111 "\lo"l"l 'k .

11.00

Om· Mttll\ h
Ont •Yt•;tr .

. $4.4()

. ... $&gt;2.80
SINGI .t: t:OPY
J•KJCF.S
...... IH:t:r~L-1

Subsr llht•r s 11111 tlt•sJr irll-! tu pay the carrier ' ·
II Iii~ n·1u11 111 mlvallt'\' dirt.•t:l lu The Daily
il :t, 6 "r 12 111unlh basis.
gl\" 1' 11 t:&lt;IITM."I" t•a dl llll llltll.

S..·nt11 wl u11

STEWART - Local La te Model
hot shoes Gene Adkins and Bob
Adams , Jr. will take a night off from
raciog, as the winged outlaw super
sprint ca rs will invade Bond's
Speedway in Stewart Friday
evemng.
Last week, Adkins, of Racine , was
perfect at the wheel of Larry Harper's No. 72 Late Model Camara and
claimed
the big
win.
Adkins
also
claimed
twofeature
seconds
Saturday
evening at Jackson County Speed-

way, whtle Adams in the notorious
" Black Bandit" placed in the money
both nights.
Tonight, late models will not compete . Cars from all over the state,
plus several notorious " outlaw"
sprint drivers are expected for the
big purse. Semi-Late Models will
also compete on the racing schedule,
joining the spring invitational.

•rill ht•

Credit

Nt• s uhst"I"IJltH•Its by t11ail pcnnilk'tl in towns
wht·n · ht&gt;llll' •·arm·r scrvi~.·~ is &lt;:~vt~ilablc .
MAll. SURSCKIPTIONS
()hluandWt'll.l Vlr~lnla

:1 Mnnlll .
S1x munll1 .
1 Yt•&lt;lf

. .. fiO.ao

. ..... 117.SO
... I.'Ll.OO

fi Munth .

1v•.• ,.

.. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

· · · 111.00
f20 00

· ·::::.: 13S:oo.

,..-------------~========::=::;::==~

w

RCYN
\

/

L
I

8
~

A

Correspondence throughout Countyr-----

,.,o"\..~r&lt;l"'

"""'.

~~

..·\1:

R

Racine ·

Carmel

By Mn. Frucls Morris

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Scarbrough of Grand .Rapids, Ohio
visited Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson
called on Douglas Johnson of Racine
Saturday evening .
Florence Circle was guest of Mrs.
Fern Gaul of Columbus, Ohio on a
Tuesday .
Mr. and Mrs . Ernest Johnson of
Belpre visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Circle on Thursday .
Sheryl Johnson spent Tuesday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Johnson of Morning Star Heights
and family .

Mrs. Mlldred Hart, Mrs. Marjorie
Grinun and Mrs. Ura Mania visited

y

New Mexico, which Is even more
sparsely populated than Meigs
County, has many of the same services we have (thanks to OVAL ) books by mall, bookmobUes, and a
few small Ubi-aries. They do not
ha
th
ve
e interlibrary Joan and
reference service we get from Ohio
Ulilv~rslty (with OVAL funds) . they
do not have the film service we have
(thanks to OVAL) . New Mexico has
b;ied wllat are. called deposit coUeclions. These might · be several
shelves of books In a store or post of·
lice or some other arrangement for
leaving a bunch of books in a small
conununity for people to use for a
month or two and then trade for
a1Jother bunch. The word on these
collections is that they are only suecessful if someone In the small community goes out of his or her way to
promote the use of the books and encourage people to get them back so
that other people can use them. If
anyone here is interested, your
libraries might be willing to try.
I could say more about what I saw
and heard and learned, but I've
already run on long enough. If you
want to know more, stop in at your
libraries. I'd be happy to chat with
you about library service in Meigs

ByEileaBeU
I was solng ~o be superorganized
and have a ~!won aU wrttten up for
my return, but the best·lald plans of
miceoutaod 'IYomen don't necessarily
turn
l.'m back from the Amen·can
Library Aasoclation annual conference in San Fra~, with side
trips to the state llbrary of New
Mexico, one of the New Mexico book·
mobiles; ·the New Mexico ·books.by
mail- operation, and an adult basic
education workshop at Shawnee
State Park near Portsmouth. !learlied some thingJ to share with your
libraries and other llbraries In the
OVAL area (Athens, Hocking ,
Jackson, Lawrence, Pickaway,
Pike, Ross, Scioto, and VInton counties).
At least one library In the OVAL
area has reported difficulties with a
moral Majority-type group. Evidently, in several states, including
California, these religion based attempts at library censorship are Jess
of a problem than the Ku Klux Klan.
Reports from the South and California indicate that Klan activities are
increasinl! and are aimed especially
at children. I'd be interested in
knowing if ·any of you have heard of

Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Gould at their
homeinNelsonvil)eMonday.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Lawson of
Colwnbus visited several friends in
Racine recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Carson of
Cool lJJ
t
t
da
v e spen a recen un Y aftemoon with Mr. and Mrs. Critt
Bradford.
Mr. and Mrs. Wald Diddle and
family of Oxier, Ky. spent a recent
weekend with Oval l,&gt;lddle and
family .
Mike Hayman of Jonesboro, Tenn.
spent a couple days with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. William Hayman while
on a bUSiness trip to Delliware, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Beegle spent a
recent weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
MaxWolfeatSandusky.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hart and
Legina returned from a vacation in
Virginia and Maryland.
Mr. and Mrs. Brad Simpson of
Seymour, Ind. visited their parents,
Mrs. Grella Simpson and Mrs. Nona
Winebrenner over the Fourth of July
weekend.
Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Critt Bradford were Mrs. ura
Morris and Mrs. Mary Carson after
the Fourth of July parade.
Mrs. Mildred Swift of Colwnbus
spent Sunday with her mother , Mrs.

s

open.

992·21 17

l"omeroy

l

rll!il~~~~-·····~

COLO\\ · "
•

Now

I, ,.,, ,,

~

July 23

CHEE.al a atONG'S
FINAL

WEEK'

~"~ ~')_

'

~~·------~

Our Best 19-lnch*
Color TV

Tbe birthdays of Ericka Boring
and Lillian Pickens were observed
at the recent ineeting of the Reedsville United Methodist Women held
at the church with Mrs. Sandra
Cowdery as hostess.
A decorated birthday cake baked
by Marlene Putman was served
following the potluck dinner, and a
dish towel shower was held for the
honored guesl3.
'file Lot'li's Prayer in unls.on w~s
fol)oWed by,scripture from John 3.by
MrS. Putman. Devotions were led by
Mrs. Cowdery using as ·her topic,
"The Presence of God ." Violet Satterfield presented recorded music.
Vivian Humphrey closed with a
prayer.

sy Radio shack

Wireless Remote Control and 90-Day
In-Home Service Included!

95
Reg .
579.95

Cut

$100

Magn ifi ceni color a i 17%
,
conlro l. automalic flesh lo~~v~~~; ~ea t u res a ul oma i•c color
conirast track tng Ac c urale d g ·t ~c JOn an d a ulomaiJ C color,
tuning - no m echa ni cal parts' ~ ~~ ~u artz- locked e lectron• c
never reqUJ res fme -tunm g LED c hca a nnl edl ke yboa rd lun• ng
. .
nne •s play #16-220

0•, 1Q011 d l Mt 'il &lt;;ln • • S • m 11 1 1 ~• 'c1 Flt• ,
L •'l1 &gt;tt'~ V~;t ·•o~nr,, Tw o "' '·~' '" P•r lt.•, ~ \l .,)ln ::Oml,&gt; l.llt '&gt;l w.d• &gt;u ll .. ,, .. ~. D··l"

Dolly Reed conducted the business
meeting with 30 shutin calls being
made. Cards were signed for several
friends. There will be ng meetings in
July or August. Attendihg besides
those named were Sue Dougl.a s and
Jpnathan, Lorraine Wigal, Mamie
Buckley, Barbara Masters, Mary
Alice Blse, Virginia Watton, Dorotha
Riebel, Vicki Keller and Tara'. .
Games were played with prizes
·
being awarded.

II '

U ' ''

I 'll&gt; • ~ ~·II ~) , t o I•.

rv ''•&gt;I

-----&gt;II(

'•&gt;"~• •'

ll() l"!. t y &gt;!&gt; ' 1•&gt; 1111 " l tl )() l

Reg .
29.95

Club hears naturalist
Ltslen •ng freedom 1s
·
·
·
heaphone that OeS x~~rs With thiS COmfortable . IIQhlwe ight
like through Iw2 wide-ran~~'2a~ywhe~e. Ltsten as loud as you
others . Earcushions seal out n' . spea ers- w tthoul dtstur b mg
_!mgertip controls . # 12_1136
otse . AdJustable headba nd.

Dale Anderson presented a program
011 herbs at the recent covered dish
picnic of the Riveryiew Garden Club
held at the Park.,
.
, Anderson ' told of the different
ways ·berbs can be used in the garden and how they can be used in
~- He had several herbs on
4Jsplay. .
.
•. During the.busi{less meeting, ~­
Ernest Whitehead, president, ap~nlell Mrs.' Donald Putman, Mrs,
Boy Hannwn, aqd Mrs. Get)e Young
to serve on .the 110111!181lhgt"~lll'
lntttee. The July meeting' \VlU be 8
~uck picnic at the Belleville Locks
ailll Dam Park.
oi- Attencling · were Mr. and Mrs.
pjlnald Myers , Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Brown, Ml'i• Ernest Whitehead and
Pandc!Auaher, Sarali •f'rydman,
~- Gene Yoiln8, ~ a~
Davia, Mrs . • Donald Putmiui a&amp;!'

·;,1)• .,

Mulberry Ave.

Stiversvilk

Rev. and Mrs. Robert Buckley and
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Roush and
daughter are on vacation visiting family called on Mr. and Mrs. Bill
friends. Rev . Buckley taught the Roush on Sunday afternoon.
adult class. Rev . Buckley was pastor
at the local church several years ~~~[i~gj;ij!j~~iij~
ago.
Mrs. Virginia Rambo and Mrs .
Kathryn Wilder, Colwnbus, formerly of this community I they were
Lawson girls when they Jived here I,
called on Mrs. Bertha Parker.
531 JACKSON AKE Rt.35 W£51"
Phone 446 · 4524
Mrs. Tina Jacobs has returned
IMRGAIN MATINEES ON SAT. SUN
home after two weeks visiting with
All SEATS J UST S I 50
ADIWISSION EVER'Y TVESDA'f I /.60
relatives in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kasper,
r FRIDAY lhru THURSDAY I
L_JULV 17 thru 23_
Dayton, visited Monday with Mrs.
Bertha Parker.

·/hae

Batte ry e • rra

~~Baad :Equalizer Tailors
Your Sound By R~.n.tlc·

'}'~·!/,

~~
---

L VIS4'
-· -

.

•
.

•

•:

"~f:
.

.. ....oc. ....

..

American Elpress. Visa and
Ma1terCard At Most Stores

Walnut-Veneer 3-Way
Sj)eaker- 47°/o Off!
Optimus • -25 by Real'ls1ic

Save•7o···
IIC' .:

Each

' Reg.
69.95

uc! Mn. Lyle Balderson.

SUGAR RUN MILLS ··

DanJohnson
Smith and
called
on and
Margaret
Ann
family
Betty

Methodist women .
celebrate birthdays

· !Jrey
Jceitii;Mrs.
. DeliVer w~~~~~~
CqmiQIIy; Mn. R

,·
. .
' '
'
Seeds - Bird Seeds • Oysltr SIMlls and Grit - Ftrtlllatrs - Lime - C•
mont and Mortar· Stock Silt · Water Soltlnor · Remedies· ·S ilt· Litters · Vaccine · Rooting · Paints - Red Brand Ftt\cing • Baler and
Binder Twine· Sprays · Glte5 • Hly • Str1w.
'
,
.
'

Laurel Cliff

r~C~o~un~ty~a:nd~o~t~he:r~p~la~ce~s~·------~--~F~r~a~n~CI~·s~M~o~r~rl~·s~.~~~~~~~l:~~~~~~~~~~~~_jLJ~:;~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~

thisinourcooncy.
One of the most dynamic speakers
was AI Milano, fundraiser for the
Dallas Symphony Orchestra. AI
learned about fundraislng when he
worked at the New York Public
Library. He had many down-toearth SU88Cstions (like not Offering
books as premiums) and said
libraries should look into fundraising campaigns as ways of
raising money to operate. Many
libraries have had such campaigns
to build new libraries; your libraries
might be able to raise money for
children's services instead. (We are
among the 5.1 percent of'libraries in
this state which do not have a story
hour, for instance. )

Forked Run State Park Natunilist

•ndW••SIVIrglnla

" M""' " ..

Your
Libraries

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Kah-s(hiUillkOhiu

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS

Camdel\_cparl\!s
Log Flume
Ride is

~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~ ;

Reg.
149.95 Each
Hurry-upgrade your ht· fi at super
Gavillgs' 10" wooter, acoustically
isolated midrange driver and 2 W'
tweeter tor smooth 45-20,000 Hz
response. "Power ·c apacity, 75 watt s.
Genuine walnut veneer linish - not
plastic. 24'x14x11 '!&gt;'.' #40-2027

..

Dealer Nearest You

s~ve our RC, RC·lOO,'Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite
,...!'&lt;~,"•"'• Root ,Beer bottlenps for' charity.
~ \

•;

'

'\

-~·

.' .

'

~

.. .

�"
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

,Page-6-The Daily Sent;nel

Rutland church
_will hold VBS
July 20-24
Vacation Bible School will be held
lit the Rutland United Methodist
ehurch, July :!G-24, wtth classes
from6 ·30 to 8:30each evenmg
There will be classes for children
from nursery through the eighth
grade with a theme for each class
Fay Sauer is director.
Theme for beginners class will be
"Who Loves Us' " w1th Mrs. Fred
W1lhamson and Mrs Robert
W1lhamson as teachers
The
younger elementary children, who
have fm1shed the f1rst and second
grades, w1ll have "The Bible Helps
us Know God" as the theme w1th
Mrs Spencer as the teacher
Marg'lofet Edwards Will be teacher
fpr the nuddle elementary class,
those havmg completed the third
and fourth grades, and the1r theme
w1ll be "B1ble Lands and T1mes."
The Rev. Robert Rider, Jr, pastor
of the church, Will teach the older
elementary children, those havmg
flmshed the f1fth and siXth grades,
and the theme Will be "Courageous
for Chr1st, " With Ed1th Talbert
teaching the juruor high school w1th
the theme, " People of God on the
Way"
Janet W1lhamson, Margaret Ella
LewiS, Edith Williamson, and Barbara Roder w1ll be the craft
teache rs
Refreshments to be
provided by Catherme Colwell w1ll
be served by Marjone Rice, Ruth
Erlewme, and Janet Morns Jane
W1se will have charge of mus1c
Each day's session wll conclude
With a worship serv1ce featurmg
somethtng spec1al, mcludmg a
ITIISSJOnary, puppeteers and f1lm
stnps. CollectiOns Will be used to
help defray expenses of the school
"'th a part to be sent to the tornado
vJctuns at Cardington.
All area youngsters are mv1ted to
attend
Refreshm e nts
and
recreatwn w•ll be mcluded m each
evenmg's actiVIty The school w1ll
close w1th a program on July 25, at 7
p m w1th a program by the ch1ldren
and a craft display .
There will be a !mal planmng
meetmg for helpers and t eacher s on
Sunday evemn~ at 7 30 p m

Social Calendar
FRIDAY
A ROUND and square dance w1ll
be held at the Meigs Semor C11lzens
Center Friday from 8 to 11 p m w1th
mus•c by the Stnng Dusters The
public IS IDVlled
SATURDAY
LADIES AUXlUARY of Eagles
Club will hold a p1cmc Saturday at 2
p m m the held off lot 68 at Royal
Oak Park Bnng covered d1sh
ICE CREAM SOCIAL by Long
Bottom Commumty Assn. Saturday
begmnmg at 4 p at Cnspm's Cor ner, between Methodist Church and
Post Office Square dancmg . baked
goods also
SUNDAY
BIGGS FAMILY reumon Sunday.
basket dmner at noon at southbound
roads1de park on Route 33
HYMN SING. 2 p m Sunday at the
Me1gs Salvat1on Army, Butternut
Ave , musiCians. smgers, public mv•ted

Salvat1on Army
plans hymn smg
The SalvatiOn Army m Pomeroy
w1ll hold a hymn smg at 2 p.m Sunda y at the headquarters on Butternut Ave , Pomeroy MusiCians,
smgers and the public are mv1ted

A large crowd was on hand
Friday, July 10, to witneSB the
cli1Slllg program of the dally
vacation Bible school of the St.

Dale Stoll,
Meigs County
Extension Ageol,
Home Economics

Convert cabbage to kraut
spoon or scrubbed hands, press the
cabbage down firmly unt1l the JUI Ce
comes to the surface
Shredding, packmg and salting 1s
repeated until the crock IS hUed to
w1thm three or four mches of the top
The ca bbage must be covered to
keep out a1r. Several methods a re
successful, mcluding a heavyweight, foodgrade plastic bag f1lled
w1th two to three mches of water.
The amount of water m the bag can
be adJusted to keep the cabbage
covered w1lh juice Another method
1s to cover the cabbage w1th clean
white muslin, and place a plate or
paraffined board that JUSt f1ts 1ns1de
the contamer on top of the muslin A
Jar !1lled w1th water and closed
tightly can be used as a we1ght.
FermentatiOn. as ev1denced by
fornnat!On of gas bubbles, proceeds
best at a room temperature of 68-72
degrees F' and IS usually completed
m five to s1x weeks
Although 1t IS a popular pracbce tu
leave kraut m the crock until 1t IS
used up, water-bath canmng IS
recommended to mamt.am the
quality uf the product. After dlscardmg any discolored kraut from the
crock and checkmg for s1gns of
spoilage, heat the sauerkraut to s Jmmermg 1187-212 degrees F .l. but do
not boll, m a stamless steel, onchipped enamel, glass or alummum

con tamer
Pack the hot sauerkraut mto
clean , hot Jars Cover w1th jmce to
one-half mch of the top of the jar AdJUSt the jar lids and water-bath
process Ia mnutes for pmts and 20
rrunutes for quarts Start to count
process lime as soon as hot Jars are
placed m bOiling water
After removmg Jllrs from the
boilmg water bath, set them upnght,
several mches apart, to cool
The boiling water bath process
stops bactenal changes m the
product, and the vacuum m the Jar
prevents mold growth
Properly processed, the kraut
may be stored on the shelf for a year

Paul's United Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plains.
Participants included each of the
five classes which were involved in
VBS. This year's theme was " Jesus,
Your Word Lives in Me! " Following
the program, certificates were given
to each student with refreslunents
served in the church basement
where crafts were on display. Mrs
Anna Rice was the VBS director
There was an average dally attendance of 70. An adult claSB was
held this year for the f1rst time, under the directiOn of the pastor, Rev
R1chard Thomas.
The begmners' class was taught
by Mrs. Sally Caldwell Helpers included Terri Stout, John Rice, and
Jumny Caldwell. Students included
Jackie EngliSh, Jod1 Caldwell, Kenny Hunt, Robert Reed, Roy Reed,

proJect
Mrs Opal Grueser was
reported 111. Mrs Barbara Fry
asked for donatiOns of used eye
glasses, and Wilham Radford gave
the legislative report
For the Rock Spnngs Grange, a
program was presented by Mrs
Ethel Grueser usmg the them e,
·summe rtime "
Mrs
He le n
Blackston read a poem, there was
group smgmg of " Beautiful Ohw"
and Mrs Lottie Leonard gave a
readmg on Water Safety " Readmgs
on vacations were g1ven by Mrs
Nancy Morns and Mrs Luc1le
Le1fhe1t; there was a quiZ on bod•es
of water, a s k1t, "Caster Oil," a nd
" What Happened to the Flag " was

Damewood. cey.tal Yoho;

Reed, Judy ,Joiles,, Allen •
·
Tripp,
Jeff
,Caldwell, Jim Broolls, .
ders, Jimmy Parker, Kelly HubBob
BrOoks.
Laura Koenig, and
bard, Jam! Hubbard, Staci Reed,

Enc Powell, Bradley Powell and FeliCI.B SamS.
The adult class was tauaht by Rev.
Heather Reed.
Thomas
with Jennie parker as craft
The primary class was taught by
leader.
Studenb-inCluded
Edna Har-· ·
Mrs. Shirley Harris w1th Mrs.
mon,
Verclll
Stout,
Floyd
Stout,'
Beverley Willford as craft helper. '
Roger
Spencer,
Hazel
Barnhlll,
:Jell- ;
Students included steve ~melt,
Kevin Godd, Mandie Harris, Marie nie Parker, and Kevin Brooks.
The music department Included :
Jo Reed, Jenny Deem, Brad Powell
Angie
Spencer, pianist, and Betty •
and Julie Soller.
The nuddler class was taught by Chevalier, song leader. Refresh,
Mrs. Jean Spencer with Mrs. Janet ments were prepared dally by Glen- :
Hunt as craft helper. Students in- na Sanders and Anna Rice.
cluded Michael Weber, David Rice,
Chris Spencer, Crystal Reed, Les
Reed, Kevin Damewood, Scott McDonald, Richard Deem, Jamie
A bridal shower hononng Velvet ;
Wemer, Debb1e Brook, Jean, Janet,
Lee Swisher, bride-elect of Robert ·
and Amanda Hunt.
Anthony (Tony) Venoy, Jr., was '
The junior class was taught by beld recently in the social room at
Mrs. Linda Damewood w1th Jeann1e the Meigs Inn.
Hunt assistant Students mcluded
Hostesses were Susan Wright,
Erica Kessinger, Robyn Barnett,
Cathy Blaettnar and Robyn Venoy. :
Games were played and prizes
awarded to Brenda Haggy and Nan- ;
cy Russell. Attending besides the :
above named were Rita Bailey, :
penter, Mary Hayes, Golda Wolf, Becki Ball, Jane Sisson, Marsha ·
Mr and Mrs. Henry Hartman and Houdashelt, April Smith, Paige :
Carla,MarcellaCastoandsons,and Cleek, Manlyn Fultz, Lera Jones,
Betty Sayre, Nancy Beaver, Janet
Mr and Mrs Earl Showalter
Sigman, Marilyn and Ann Pearch,
Mr. and Mrs. Haas Betz, St
Joseph, M1ch , spent several days Circleville; NeUe Wright, Loraine •
w1th Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy and Venoy, Nola and Paula Swisher.
Those sending gifts but unable to
other relallves.
attend
were Betty Pooler, Myl'lle
Erma Cleland, Esta White, Mr.
Grover,
Pat Humphreys, Eleanor ;
and Mrs Hobart Newell and Mr. and
and
Cathy
Blaettnar, Faye and ·
Mrs. Harold Newell, Kathy, Kenny
Glenda
Gum,
Sue and Cathy Delong,'
andJunmy, attendedasurpriseparV
1dia
G1rolanu,
Kay Logan, Sandy
ty g1ven for Blame Newell on his 7'th
Falls, and Debi
Sw1sher,
Olmstead
birthday at the home of Mr . ' 1d
Hanson,
Jackson.
Mrs. Bob Dailey, Athens, onSund; v.

!

By Clarice Allen
CorresJ!Oodeot

Ladies Auxiliary
meets

BESf'

Rl.

\ \ CENtER, INC.

~

RaY Rins
Ph. 915-4110

Chester

MIDDl.EPORT
BOOK SIORE
Church,. O!lice SuJIPI•e•
GIFTS •

"Mill

•Micklleport

Jt" ~K

KE~MIT1 S

KORNER

Pomeroy, Ohio

TheM lNG JAMU VERSION wor~
&amp;

4 ·~~uw,
h"

l

f

• "''""'or .. ..,.

•u'""'"'
'", r..,., 1 ,,
~•arlo ~ l}j~[ n l ~rmo

dr ll&lt;l hO

&amp;

A

oun

IJA.I;" mgn
nuo r~~lumo~ •o•n iWIJ lb&lt; "

I 41KI

""' "

n~h

"

P¥" ~II'JIIuurlork&gt; on~ / '~"''"""'"

w"'

&amp;

A

...........""""''""''

JJ

•

""'r"''"

'

•II~

1

••--nf

·~· .. ,~....

• t Y&lt; IL'I&lt;I!o.

rPI&lt;ko

&lt;&lt;&gt;m~n&lt;~

•IMler ..,...

.....

oou ..,,.. .. ~

~

Write for descript 1ve
brochure and pnce s
I IIWI"III'&gt;I

-"""''JI

• Ito.

IIW•arfti•Hol
Hole"•

Ito,

to~c \I l!ll t!t

«• •

rnn ~~~
IWI. '

o,

lioN,

ol,

.,,,.,, ,, ~ '""""' •••

•'''""~

t••nJ&lt;rtotofll'tOdr

I ''""" ' J
'" ,o~,,,,

~ ..o ·~· ·

I' "' ' ..,. • .r I ' "' ol "' •ml ..,,
• orl "t I
,.I
lilt
II III
IMI$111\/Irr t'i
ll•
oh
1111

''

~ ' "•Ill ~"'
ynrh.olo
I

'I'"'

"~·r

' "'"" ' '
~

~l&lt;l.of

,,

. ~~.

,

I

-

~_.::.

'

u..

'H k .i

I """ I" • I o ti&gt;o

INUI II oulonl I
.,.,~
''"""' lh, '" 1 ~ 0 ' l t•l t•rll ~ '" ' "' 10 lUI\ Ill V;ot\hrll
h r S.tlf t•l&lt; 1111' .oil "' 1" " '" ' lun l• mrM&gt;I r""'lf'k I •
""'" • " ' '' not I •W• ~ ,J In oh c I I&lt;P .. "'•~• .~ ot. • •• tl
'' "&lt;Uo•••&gt;&lt;~•l'lonl" ''•' Ho'&lt; Mrr ..
~-'Jro 1

t.,....

r•~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~iiiiiiiliiil~iiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

"" ""'~ "'"'''" ""' •~.,.~ ' r•"'r ,.,.~ r..,., '""h

.. _ r torn

'''* ""'""' '.

'""'~

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

THE HITCHING POST

99

FORMERLY TALL TIMBERS NIGHT CLUB
(NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT)

br. P. James Navalkowsky

THE DALTON GANG

Specializing In Internal Medicine
Is Now Accepting Patients..

10:00 P.M. TO 2:00 A.M.
'1.00 COVER CHARGE

Office Hours

Will Be
9 a.m. 5 p.m.

ii~t~~!i~~~:~;!

Monday - Friday

Cam del\.

, ,)

'

Dr. Navalkowsky

Camden Park
wiiJ be
reaei'Ved
'•
Saturday, July 18, lor an
outlna ol the 'Union Car·
bide Enalneerlna D~part·
ment until 4 pm.
Bt. 60 w..t Huntlnlto'!, W.Va.

-. .
~'I ' 6lWJ·~3 .
'

' '

,'

I,

'

fOR ·;A~~~I~TMn~~S.
( '~ ~.

I .

,;

Dr. Na~~l~owsky's Office L
~·
I
l;ocated At '' -.•
.f

l7
J/

....

•

•

..

"I

'&lt;~ ..

25U J·•ac~~o·*'' ;~ve.

'

r.'

.'

· ~The

@0

lho Good·Old Days

·-

WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE

(~"

ji::I191'LJ--1'2:;)

Grocertes-

UN ITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY Of
MEIGS COUNTY The Rev Wando
Johnson . drrector, Horold Johnson
Associate O~rector 99:2 -3350
Harnsonvtlle Presbyter1on Morn1ng
Worship q a m
Middleport Presbytenan ~ Marntng
Worsh1p 10 15a m
Mornmg
Syracuse Presbytenon
Worship 11 30 o m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Randol!
Batley pa stor Sunday school , 10 am
Sunday ~~~o~orstHp 11 o m
CMtldren s
church 11 am , Sunday evenmg ser
vrce 7 .30 p m
Wedne sday eve nrng
young todte s ou.ocrhory b p m Wedn es
day fomrly worshrp 7 00 p rn
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Near
long Bottom Edsel Hart pastor Sunday
Church 7 30 p m
school 10 o m
prayer meetrng 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL
Th~rd
Ave the Rev W•lhom Kmtt el poslo1
Thomas Ke ll y Sunday School Supt Sun
day school 10 am Classes lor all age s
7 30
Btble study
even1ng servrce
Wednesday 7 30 p m youth ser\l tces
Fndoy 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST Cor
ne r Ask and Plum Rolph Butcher
pastor Saturday even •ng serviCe 7 30
p m Sunday School 10 o m Sunday
WorsM1p ServiCe , 11 o m
8 1ble Study
Wed
7 30 p m
Noel Herrmann
teacher
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
MEtHODIST CHURCH
Rtchard W Thomas Or rector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert McGee
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 om
Worsh1p ser vr&lt;e 10 30 om
Chorr
7 p m Rev
rehearsal Wednesday
Rober t McGee pastor
ENTERPR ISE Warsh tp 9 o m Church
School 10 am RICMord Rathemtch
pastor
ROCK SPRINGS Sunday School ~ 15 o
R1chord
m Worshtp serviCe 10 o m
Rothem rc h poslor..
FLATWOODS Church School 10 om
Worshtp 11 o m , Rtc hord Rothem rc h
pastor
MIDDlEPORT ClUSTER
HEATH Church School 9 30 o m Wor
sh1p 10 30 am UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robrnsan Pastor
RUTLAND Churcl-l School 9 30 o m
Worlliihtp 10 JOo m
SALEM CENlER
Worsh1p q o m
Church School9 .cS o m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Sian ley Mernfted Mtntsrer
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 o m Church
School lOam '
MINERSVILLE Church School 9 am
Wor sh 1p 10 o m
ASBURY Church School 9 50 o m
Worshtp II a m Btble Studv 7 JO p m
Thursdav UMW Its I Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Dav1d Horfl'!i
Re~o~ Mark Flynn
Rev Florence Sm•th
H• lton Wolfe
BETHANY
(Dorcas)
Worsh1p 9 00
o m Church School 10 00 a m B•ble
study 1st 2nd, Jrd and Sth Tuesdays
7 15 p m youth fellowsh tp 2nd ond 4th
lue~tdoys , 6 00 p m
CARMEL and SUTTON (Wonh1p Sun
dav School and most other events held
Jomtly ) Sunday Schoo/9 -'5 and Worstltp
11 00 ot Sutton ftrsl and ft•urd Sundays
ond ot Carmel second and fourth Sun
days Btble Studv second fourth ond
fifth Thursdays 7 · 15 p m Fom1l)' Ntght
Fellowshtp Dtnner th~rd Thursday 6 JO

pm
APPLE GROVE

Suridoy School 9 30
am Worsh tp 7 30 p m I stand 3rd Sun
days Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30
p m Fellow!lhrp supper frrst Saturday b
p m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7.30 p m.
EAST i lETART, Chruch School 9 om
, Wonhtp serv•G• tO a m . Prayer meet•ng
' 7 30 p .m . 'Wednesday. , UMW second
Tuesday730pm ' '
.. ..t
•
RACINe WESLEYAN -, Sunday tchooi,
10om . worsh1p 11om Chotr prochce
Thursday , 8 p m .
~ET~RT FA.lLS .. t Worship servrce 9
om. ChurcH Sch~ lOa m
MORNING STAR' Worsh1p 9.30 om .
Ch~rch School10.30 ~ m . •
' ·
MORSE CHAPE~ . 'C hurch School 9.30
a.m . Wonh1p 11 o.m l
l
,
POIIJ LAND Sundoy School 6.30 p. ,\, .
Evenrng Worshtp, 7 30 , p .m
Yau1h
t=.tlowship Wednftday. 7:30p.m.
NOIHHIEAST CLUSTER
Rov. RlcharCI W. Thomos
O,uane Sy~ttrtcker, Sr
John ... Do"lllos
' ¢hor... Domlgon '
'
JOI'PA . Worship 9 00 o .m . Church

Mornlnt

I ~arthp

,

-,

....
••

.

Nat•onw•de 1ns. Co.

Alh t' o ~Covnty
~.lv oniJ ~ I L. o.ln

ol Columbus, 0

804 W Matn
q92 1318 P om e roy

Pomeroy

Won~ 110:30 a .m.

7•

7:30 ,JI.M.

lll1lo

Pomcrooy
'ilY2 l32S

Ah for the hmt• wht'n lafe w as st mp l~&lt;' ' You
could ~u for .l pt cmc and th erl' \.\ould be no jl'l
p la nt..&gt;s screammg owrht&gt;.td You dtdn t have to
wvrry about sugar short&lt;~gt..•s and llll o;hmtagt&gt;s
dnd tht.•t h&lt;lmt' uf 1'\lobal w,u Ynu d1dn 1 havt' lo

hefting
~llltlj

ntu4i!' r• et t:'.:oi .
.
11/JfMC?,_
"""""
•
.,.
"·"'·
AIMuoillfii•*•••lf'IW'IIIP • II a .on . Youth, 6:30

...,.

s,.,.,.
l?WJ!,

-' '

ELliS &amp; SONS SOHIO

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE
tor A Real Auction
C .ll11he Real McCoy "
I 0 ' M&lt;~c ' McCoy
h'l 1, Reed sville, Oh
9115 31144

'

.,,

&gt;t~&gt;,.

\~ ·
,,

,,•1

•"

-:.upl Sunday sc hool 9 30 o m worsh1p
ser vrce 10 30 o rn 81ble Study T u e ~ d oy
7 JOp m
REORGANI ZED CH URCH OF JE SUS
CHRIST OF
LATTER DAY'
SAINfS
Port l and RaCine Hood Wtlltom Hou sh
pa stor Phylh~ Stobort Sunday Sc hoo l
Supt Sunday Srhool 9 30 o m Mornrng
wor shrp 10 30 o m Sunday evc nrng
~o rv•ce 7 p m
WPrlne!; day even rng
pray er ~ervt c es 7 30 p m
81::THL EHEM 8A PT1 ST Rev Eo rl Shuler
pastor Worsh1p ~e r vrce 9 JO om Su n
day sc hool I 0 30 o rn 8rbl e St udy and
pray er ~ervrce Thursdoy 7 30 r m
CARLETON CHURCH Krng o;, huty Nood
Gary Ktnq past o1 Sunday sc h oo l 'i JO
o rn Rolph Co t t &lt;&gt; uperrntendent e~o~en
mq worshrp 7 30 p m flroyer mcctrnq
Wedne&lt;.:doy 7 JO I) m
LONG BOTTOM LHHIST!AN
lo m
~o c ho so n pa stor Wollor e Oom f'wood
Sunday School Superontcndcnt Worshrp
o;prv oce ol q o m llrbl e S&lt; h oo ll O am
tl;'fll
h'IJN H l) l t~JI
111 J..' o I
f.'

II,

, fo1
I

{

"

I

11," h 1

o

l

1,

,

j

I

,

1

'

1 11

I J

1 ''

II ,

o

,

I ·~

Rutland, Otlro 4577S
J Wm 'Btll " Brown, Owner
PMne 1614) 741 7777

M tddl cp o rt
Pomt•roy 0

It wuld bt.• worth mv t.•stt~·ltm~

p m Sundays W edn esday Nrght Pray e r
FULL GOSPEl liGHTHOUSE CHURCH
Meet•ng 7 30 p m
'
Posror Ketth Adktns located on
ST PAUL (Tuppers Plorm.l Sunday Hrfond Rood Sunday Mornmg Servrce
School 9 00 a IT'! Mornmg Wors h1p at
10 a m Ev enrng serviCes I 30 p m
Sunday Tuesday and Fr1doy mght s
10 00 a m Soble Study 7 30 p m Tues
do y
LIBERTY CHR ISTI AN CHURCH -4 Lrberty
SOUTH BETHEL (Srl ver Rtdge ) Sunday
A ve
Pom eroy Sunday School 10 00
School 9 00 a m Mornrng Wo shrp I 0 00
o m Wor sh rp 7 30 p m
Wednesday
a m W ednesday B1b l e Study 7 30 p m
ServiCe 7 30 o m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Olrver
Sworn Supennl endent Sunday sc h oo l
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD Rev R E
q JO every week
Robrn son pas tor Sunday sc Mool 9 JO
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION
Re,
o m wonhrp se rvac e 1 1 o m even rng
Ke1th Eblrn poster Sunday School 9 30
se rv rce 7 00 youth serv1c e Wednes
om
l eonard Grlmore ltr s t elde r
day 7 00 p m
e\lenrng se rvrce 7 30 p m Wedn es day
lANG SV IllE
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
pray er meetrng 7 30 p m
Robert E Mu sser pas l o r Sunday o;.c hool
BEARWAIIOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
9 30 o m Pau l Musser sup t mornrng
CHRIST Duane Warden mtnts ter Btb le
wa rsh1p 10 30 Sunday eventng servoce
doss 9 30om morntng worshrp, 10 30
7 00 mrd week ser vrce Wednesday 7
o m
ENenrng warsh rp
6 30 p m
pm
Wednesday Brble s tudy 6 JO p m
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
Of
IHI
NEW
SllVENSVIllE COMMUNITY'
NAZARENE Re"" James 8 Krlfle pastor
Church Sunday School se rvr ce 9 45
N o rman
Pr es l e y
Sunday Sch oo l
om
Worshrp
serv•ce
10 30
Supenntendent
Sunday school q 30
Evongel 1s hc Serv1ce 7 30 p m W edn e~
mornrnq worsh•p
10 45 a m
a m
day Prayer meet tng 7 30
r:&gt;vange lr sfr c ser vrce 7 p m Prayer and
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomer oy
Protse Wedn es day
7 p m
youth
Hom san vr ll e Rd Robert Purtell poster
rneelong 7 p m
Brl f M cElroy Sunday school sup! Sunday
WEN UNIIED BREIHREN IN CHRIST
sc hool 9 30 o m marntng wor shtp and
l:lden R Ulok e pa stor Sunday Schoo l 10
commun1on 10 30 o m Sunday worsh tp
a m Rob~rt Ree d sup! Monl tng .,;e t
Wednesday evenrng
sen. rce 7 p m
man 11 a m
Sunday nrght servr ces
pray er m eeltng ond Btb le study 7 p m
Chn .. tron EndeO\/Or 7 30 p m Song ser
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH Ptn e
Preo r htnq !J JO p m
vrco 8 p m
Gr ove The Rev W1llrom Mtddleswa rth
Mtdweek Ptoy er rn ee trng Wedne ~ d oy 7
Pa stor Church serv •ces 9 30 o m Sun
p m Alv1n Reed loy leader
day Schoal10 30 a m
CHURCH OF JES US CHR IST Loroled ol
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR IST Jerry
Rutland on New l•ma Rend nel(t to
flrnglev poslor Sunday school 9 30
fore~! A cr e Park
Rev Rov Rou o;.e
om
morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 o m
poster Robert Mu s~cr Sunday Sc hoo l
Wednm;doy e\lentng ser\ltC9 7 30
~ up! Sunday sc hool 10 30 o m wo ro:. hrp
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Rev Earl Shul &lt;' l
7 JO p m Brbl e Study W edn esday 7 30
pastor Sunday 5Chool 9 30om Chu1 ( h
p m Saturday n rgh t prayer ser11 rce 7 30
~e rv rce
7 p m
youth mee trnq
b
pm
p m Tu esday 8rbl e Study 7 p m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Roger
RACINE CHUR CH OF IHE NAZARENE
Watson pastor Mrldred Zregl er Sunday
Rev John A Collman pastor Mori ho
~c hool sup ! M orno ng wor~hr p q 30 o m
Wolfe Chatrmon of the Boord of Ch rrs
Sundoy 5c hao l 10 30 o rn evenrng !ioe r
Iron Lrl e Sunday Schoo l 9 JO o m mor
\I I((" 7 30
n•ng worstup 10 30 Sunday eve mnq
worshop 7 30 p m
Prayer mee lrr1g
MT UNION BAPTIST
Tom Dooley
pastor Joe Sa yr e S S Supt Sundav
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sc hool 9 45 a m
Evenrng Wonh1p
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Don l Walk er
7 30 p m Pray er meettng Wednesday
Pa stor Robert Sm1th Sundov ~c h ool
I 3U p m
supt Sunday school 9 30 o m morn•nq
I UPPERS PLA INS CHURCH OF CHRIST
worshrp 10 40 a m
Sunday e~o~enong
Vrn&lt;er t C W n t ers Ill mrnr'.:lfer Hermon
worsh1p 7 30. Wedn esday evenrng Brble
~lock
supen nfend ent Sunday Sc hoo l
study 7 30
9 30 Q m
evenrng servtee 7 p m
DANVILLE WESLEY AN
Rev
R 0
Wednesday Btbl c Study 7 p m
Brown pastor Sunday School
9 30
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
a m mornrng worsh 1p 10 45 , youth ser
Rev Herbert Grote pa stor Fronk Rtltle
vtce 6 •5 p m evenmg warsh rp 7 30
~u pt .)undoy School q 30 )1m Wor sh• p
pm
prayer and pra1se Wednesday
'&gt;C r \IICC 11 o m and 7 30 p m Prover
7JOpm
mee t1ng Wednes day 7 30 p m
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Mo'
lAUREl CliFF FREE MITHOOISI
v•n Mark1n poster Steve Ltttle Sunday
CHURCH Re v Floyd F Shook pa stor
.,c haol supt Sunday school. 10 a m
lloyd Wr rght
Dtr ec tor ol Chr~stran
mornrng worsh1p 11 a m Sunday e ven
Edu colton Sunday School 9 30 a m
•ng worshtp 1 30 Prayer meetmg and
Cho1r
Morn1ng Wor sh1p 10 30 o m
Brble study Thursday , 7 JO p m youth
Eventng
Pracflce Sunday 6 30 p m
serv1ce 6 p m Sunday
Wm sh1p 7 30 p m W c dnPs doy Prover
CHRISTIAN FEllOWSHIP CHURCH 363
ond Btble Study 7 30 p m
N 2nd Ave M1ddleport Sunday School
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST ChorJe.,
10 00 a m Sun ' Tues Evenrng Servrces
Ru s&lt;;el l Sr
mrntste r R• ck Mmamber
7 30 p m Fndoy Prayer Maeltng 7 30
pm

S.11e&gt; end

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Complete
Automotiv e
Serv1ce
\
Locust &amp; Beech Stree t
9n 9911 Mtddll'port

L hanct'S Jrt.' \flU H fmJ pnl\ ~ '" '-' thtn~ v.as
rt.•a ll y dlfft•n•nt Pt.•nplt.• rltri M't.'m h' h .wt• mtlrt'
f.111h 1n tht.• t.lld d a\'&gt; fht.'\ 'it.t.nwr.J d o:-.l'r tu th l'
t.hun.h MJvbt.• that o; unt rt.'•l"un '' h\ l11l ;; ,ls
tmnyurl mnrc lruut-lt• frt't
'" ' g,. '!til'~
~aot"'''"~
Bo, i!O.'• C -.OCM,. I 'O v~ !l"'o

m

210 s Second

Bt.•ht.•ve that'
If st.l ~ t.· l'k nut an nldstt.•r a n d ao.;k him hm" 1t
r ...•allv ~&lt;~&lt;cls .-11u"1n~" httlt• h1t ft'T th t' t.dmnufl.l~l
of nm.tct l~ ld

~ U

I

' '

"

o

fHH DOM C.OSflEL MISS ION ar Balrl
Knob located on County Nood 31 Rev
Lawrence G lue scnc omp pos lot Rl.'v
Roger
Wrllfo r d
OS51 Si ont
1-JO'&gt;tOt
fJr eac htng servr ces Su ndoy 7 JO p m
praye• tl'leel rn g Wed ne!iodoy 7 30 p m
Gory Gnlloth l eader Youlh q•oup~
Sunday evetnq 6 JO p m wrth Rog er ar1d
Vtolet Wrltl ord as l eader!&gt; Commu11o0r1
o;,el~nre'&gt; frr st Sunday em h month
WHITE S CHAPEL Coolvrlle RO H ~ v
Hoy Oeete1 pastor Sunday sch ool 9 JO
o m w'lr sh rp sorv l(e 10 30om B1hl l.'
'-ludy ond p raye r ~mv r ce Wedne .. day
7 JOp m
RU fl ANO CHUIKH Of CHRI Sf Bob
Bu r ktnghom po 5fo' Herb i:lh oll Sun
doy ~ rhoo l o;rrpl Sunday sc hool 9 JO
o rn mo rnrn q wor~ hrp and comu noon
10 JO am
RU TLA ND BIBLE M~THOO I SI CH URCH
Amos r.ll1 o; po-. tor Donny lrll ~ Sunday
Sc hool Su p t Sunday Srhool ~ JO a m
fo ll owed by momm q war&lt;,h rp Slmdoy
evenrnq ~crvr ce
7 00 p rn
fJr oy~·r
m eel •ng Wodne'&gt;dov 7 00 p no
RUTlAND
C H U KC H
OF
1H~
NAZANENE Rev lloyd 0 G•rrmn J•
po .-.tar Sundoy !oc hool 9 JO o m wot
'i h tp serv rco 10 30 om Broodr oo;, l lr vf'
ovt: r WMJ' O young peop l es '&gt;e l v occo 7
p m l::: vanqolo '&gt; t&lt;C ..,erv oc e 7 JO p m
Wfl'rlnr~~doy 'ler v• ce 7 JO p m
HRST SOUTHERN BAPTI ST Co r nf' l o l
Second ond Ar1d er~on Mo &lt;&gt;on flo~to r
Fran~ Low th(' r
Sunday '&gt;c hool ~ 45
orn wm s hrp ~e tvrcc ll om onrt7JO
p m Wo('kly 8rb l('l Sludy Wedn o'&gt;d oy
730 fJm
MASON CHURCH OF CHRtST M1lle•
Si Mmon W Vo Eugene L Conge•
mrnrster Sunday Brbl l? Sl udy 10 om
Worsh1p 11 a m and 7 p m W edne&lt;odoy
6 rble Study vocal muSIC 7 p m
UFE SCIENCE ( HURCH
1'J No1 th
rhord St Ches hrre lndepondonr fun
d ome ntol ser viC QS Sunday evenmq 7 30
p m Pa sto r Nov Or Robert Person s
MASON ASSE MBl V OF GOD Duddtng
lone Maso n W Vo Rev H:onnte 8
Rose Pa st or Sunday School 9 4S o m
Mormng Worshtp 11 am Eventng Ser
viCe 7 30 p m Wednesday Women s
M1n1sln e5 q o m (meeting and pray er
Pr ayer and B1ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH Of CHRIS: IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Ttle Rev Wilham
Campbell poster Sunday School 9 30
o m Jame s Hughes supt evenrng ser
v rce 7 30 p m Wednesday evomng
j)r ayer me e t~ng 7 30 p m Youth pray er
'Oerv•ce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBlE CHURCH Letart W
Vo Rt I Mar~ lrw rn pastor Worsh 1p
servtces 9 30 o m Sunday school 11
o m even1ng worsh•p 7 30 p m lues
day cottage l 'rayor mee hng and Btble
!i ludy
9 30 am
Worshop serviC e
W ednesday 7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
on Pom eroy P1k o County Rood 25 near
flatwoods Re v Blackwood pa stor Ser
vrc e s on Sunday ol 10 30 a m and 7 JO
p m .,rth SUnday sc Mool , 9 30om B1ble
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
INC
' Pearl Sl , Mtddleport Rev
O ' Dell Manley . p6stor Sunday scl,ool
9 30 a.m . Mornrng worshtp 10 30om
evenmg worsh1p 7 30 p m Tuesday
· 12 30 p m Women J p rayer meeting.
Prayer and pro1se servtce Wednesday ,

7 lOp m
RUTLAND APOS TOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST. Elder Jomes Mrllar 8tblo
study, Wednesday 7 30 p.m .. Sunday
School, 10 o.m Sunday ntght servtce,

7 30 p.m ..
POMEROY ' WESLEYAN HOLINESt Harnsonvllle Rood Dewey K•ng , pastor
Henry Ebl1n, Jr .• Sunday School Supt
Sunday School q 30 o m Morning War

o;.h rJ-l I I o m Su nday evenmg ser\1/Ce
7 JO m Prayer M ee tmg I hu rs doy 7 30
pm
SYHACUSE fiRST CHURCH OF GOD
No! Penlerosto l Rev George Orler
pastor Wor ~ h•p serv•ce Sunday 9 45
a m Sunday ~c hool 11 o m worsh1p
Thursday prayer
se f\ rce 7 JO p m
m ee trng 7 30 p m
Ml HERMON Un1ted Brethre n m
Ch r rs t CMurch Rev Robert Sanders
pastor Don Wrll loy leader located rn
Te.&lt;os Communrr y oil CR 82 Sunday
.rhool q 30 a m Mornrng w orshrp ser
v•( o I 0 -45 o m e""en rng preochtng ser
vrce ~econd and f ourth Sundays 7 30
1' m Chrr stron Endeavor frrst and thtrd
Sunday'&gt; 7 30 p m Wedne sday praye1
mt:&gt;elrng and Brbl t:&gt; study 7 30 p m
JfHOVAH S WITNESSES 37319 State
Hou f f' 12 4 (One mrle east ot Rutland )
Sunday Br ble l ee fu1 e 9 30 a m Wot
chtower '&gt;t udy 10 10 o m Tuesday 81
bl('
~ tudy
7 30 p m
Thur sday
th t'oc •olrc Sc hoo l 7 JO p m
Servtce
Mcl'f lnq l:l 20 p m
RUTLAND FREEWILL 8AI-' TIS r Church
'luiPrn St
Rutl and Do11ald Kou Sr
pno.,lar IJ~Jd StcwOII su permte ndent
Sunday School 10 om e venrng war
~ hop I J O p m Wcdne!&gt;d o y evenrng ser
v u • 7 JO p m
CHURCH OF GOU ol P1ophery l oco ted
or1 th P 0 J Whrte Rood oil h1ghwoy 160
S11ndoy School 10 om Su per nte nden t
John Lo ~o~edoy Fn sl W ed n e5day mghr of
m&lt;"'nlh CPMA se r v1ce-. second Wedn es
duy WMB mee trng thrrd through lrfth
youth serv1c e Gcootge Cro yl e pa stor
HOPE BAP TIS T CHAPEL
570 G ronr
Sr M rddl eporl Sunday Sc hoo l 10 a m
mot nmq worshrp 11 o m e\lenmg war
-, hq&gt; 7 p m W cdne-.dov cvenmg Brble
~ hrrf v nnrl prayer m ee ting 7 p m AI
lo ltnl ed wrt h Sou ther n 8optr ~ t Conven
Ir on
~"AbfORO CHURCH OF CHRI ST
Wo f ky G1lbNf p o~ to•
Stev e Ptckens
" " P~' ' onf cndPnt Sunday School 9 30 a
rn Chur c h Sef~o~ r ros 10 30a m
JUUi lEE C HR IS TlAN
CENTER
Gf'O tqf' ~ Crr&gt;e k Rami Nev C J Lemley
t•n ~ I OI
John felh11c \ upe rrnlendent
Churr M ".c h oo l 9 30 o Ill mornrng wor
-,h op 10 )() cvc n.n ~ servrce 7 p m Brbl£&gt;
Studv lhur s 7 p m Clo &lt;,ses for oll age s
Nur'&gt;f' IY pro vr rfedlo • ~~~o~orshrp -:.e r ... tces
Sl PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner
ol ~v&lt; nmorf' o•'rt Second St~ Pom eroy
lhP Rf'v Wdlr om M •ddleswarth Pastor
'J undoy School ot 9 45 a m and Churd
-,,, ,. ., ff''- It o m
SACRlD H~ANI Re- v Father Paul 0
W&lt;&gt; ll on poo; l a r Phone 9&lt;'11 1!115 Sotu r
day eventng M as'&gt; 7 :JO Su nday Moss 8
Co nl ess •on Saturday
and 10 a m
77J0 prn
V t (rO~Y HAP liS T
575 N 2nd Sl
M"ldlcport Jorne!io E Kees('e pas tor
Sunrlo y rnor nrnq wors hrp 10 am even
onq " f'lvrce 7 W ednesday evenrng war
· hop I p m Vrsr foh on Thursday 6 30
pm

l NINll"t' (h n .. tr on A sse mbly Coolvtlle
Grlbe1t Sp encer
pmtor Sunday
-,c hool q 30 o m marn rng warsh1p 11
n m Sunday ev enrng serv1ce 7 30 p m
m•dw cek pray er ser ,. •ce W ednes day
7 JOp m
MOUNT O lr ve Commun rly Church
Law renc e Bu .-. h p o~lo r Max Folm er Sr
Supennlendent Sunday Schoo l and mor
n tng wotsh•p 9 30 a m Sunday £O"e nmg
o;e rv rce 7 p m You th meetrnq and B•ble
study Wedne '&gt;rloy 7 p m
Houle 7 on
UNlTEO FAlTH CH UNCH
Pomeroy bypo\' Nf' v Nobmr Smtth Sr
pastor Re v Jnrn c~ Cundtll os~rstant .
po &lt;o tor Sunrtoy Sr h oo l 9 30 o m morn
•ng wo r ~ hrp 10 JO o m cvenmg wor ·
o; htp
7 30
Women'&gt;
Fellawst-up
Tu esday s 10 o m W ed nesday n1ght
pra yer \er vH'_&lt;' 7 JO p m
FAITH BAPTIST Church Mason meet
ot Umted Steel Workers Unton Hall
Railroad St Mason Pastor Or James
De8ruf'll Mornrng worshtp 9 30 a m
Sunday School IO :JO a m Eventng ser •
'&gt;/tee 7 p m Prayer meelrng Wed 7 3()
p m Mid week B1ble study Thurs 7"
pm
FOREST NUN IIAI'l !S T
Re v Nyl e
Bo rd en
pn '&gt; tOI
Carnc l r u~
Sun ch
~undoy &lt;,choo l
9 30
'&gt;uperr ntende n t
om -.ero nrl on rl lou1th Sundoy 'l war
-. ho p ~e r vtcc ol 'J 30 p m
Ml MORIAH BAflTI ST
fourth on&lt;{
Mam St M rddl cport Hev Colvan Mrn ..
m s pastor M1 &lt;o El,.,n Bumgordn~ r •
supl Sunday .,c h ool 9 30 am worsh1Ji'
serv1ce I 0 •s a m
NORTH BETHEL Untied M e lho.J r.,t"'
ChurCh Re v Char\ ('&gt;s Oom1gan I)O'.:IIOt
Sunday Schoo l 9 30 o m Wor sht p SE't
v1ce 10 &lt;tS a m
Sunday 8rbl 11 ~turl .
1 00 p m W edn eo;day prayer r.. r eto 1q •
7~pm
•
BURLINGHAM SOUTt! ~ HN BAI'JIST:
CHURCH Mouto I Sh 1d• floo;tor Don'"
Slc.rc;k. Alfdr oterl N th '-,pu thern Boptls(
Conve_ntton Sun• l&lt; l ~ •,r hool I 30 p m ;-.
Sunday wo,.,h•p 'J JO J-l m Thursddy"
eventng B 1 b~c o,. ludy 7 p m
'
PENTECOS 1Al
ASSEMBlY
Racme
Haut e 124 W•l110m Hoj:m ck pastor. Sun
doy !&lt;rc hool 10 o m . Sunday tven1ng ser •
"'" ~.:&gt; 6 30 p m Wednesday ee01ng se r ;
V H ~ .,

' A~I't'JII f.l ,.t-\A

r .. nu .... ' ,, l nr 1),
rl!t \• honl r.; Lll
10 Jfl • m l 'r •
!&gt;uno I ,., .

~-

:I

'

~~

Fire
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR. Equipment
Sen11ce

Wt.lff)'

Thurtdayllblol..,,.7:30p.!".
t.
.J1HQS\11UE: SUoMI&lt;iy SchoOl 9:30 •·'!'·

;" .

461 5 Thltd, N.1ddl('p0rf
992 2196

992 6655

SC~I10.00o.m , ' ~ ' '
) ' CHUTlR, Wonliop 9 a.m.. Churc~
School 10 o.m. Cllolr 1-rsol 7 p.m ,
Tl•u~•· llble Study ; Thurtdoys. •
1.30p.l"·
'
LONG IDTToM, Sunday Sctw.oj ot 9·30'
a.m. E-ll!t' ll'llir¥tlp ot 7:30 P·"1·

\

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

Fnrmo&gt; rlv

211. e. Marn

Pomerov

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Loan Co.

~

'·

,

Phone 992 -6304
126 E Mam

Phone 992-3480 '-... §; . ; , .

General Merchand1~e
Racene 949 25SO

•• r~e " " or •~• bcp•fiWII ..
lh&lt; &lt;nd ~r Ito&lt; "fnu I~ '"dlellr

Eilt In or
C.:.rry Out

Pomeroy

IMmond Savings &amp;

Bakenot
Golod Bread

•'r',."" ' r"'' ...~ "' ,,., •- ,
p•cn •1111 btr'"' OIUIJ IIIIWI 11 11 "'"~ ,

S IMilWcou" o~l ~otno&lt;I OU • """ I&lt;I«

'"'"
'

~'"'"'~•

"

* ~OOJI!w.. ~ ~ P'"""•
•• ""'''""'h- \;uol

I "M

a

Prescrtphons
992-29SS

HEINER'S

...,r ,._,, tM_,

I':Mrddleport
S to N 2nd

M.:un

MARK VSTORE 'f. _
Middleport ~

'.'v

TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H Perrrn
F"aslor Roy Mayer Sunday school supt
Church Schoo l 9 15 am worshrp ser
v1ce, 10·30 am Cho1r rehearsal Tue ~
day 7 30 p m under d~rectton of A l rce
Nease
POMEROY
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE Corner Unton and Mulberry
Rev Clyde V Henderson pastor Sun
doy school. 9 30 o m , G l en McC lung
supl , morntng wor')htp 10 30 om
evenrng servtce 7 30 m1d week ser
~o~•ce. Wednesdov 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH
376 E
MOl'\ St , Pomeroy The Rev Robert 8
Groves. rector Sunday serv1ces at 10 30
o m Holy Communron on the firS! Sun
day of eoc" month and comb1ned wrth
morn1ng prayer on the thrrd Sunday
Mornrng prayer and sermon on a ll other
Sunday~ of the month Church School
and nursery core prov1ded Coffee hour
rn the Port ~.,Hq ~Uro.rn~t_dtately followmg
the serv1ce ""'""'"'.,. ,:'!.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Mmn St Ned Proudfoot pastor 81bl e
school 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh1 p
10 30 o m Youth meehngs 6 30 p m
evenmg worsh 1p, 7 30 Wednesday n1ght
prayer meetrng and 81bl e study 7 30
p .m .
THE SALVATION ARMY 115 Bullernut
Ave. Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Ra'(Wm
mg officers '" charge Sundoy ·holmess
meettng. 10 am , Sunday School 10 30
a.ff)-1. Sunday ~ehoolleoder YPSM Elo1se
Adams 7 30 p.m
solvation meetmg
vanovs speakers and mus1c spec•ols
Thursday - 10 o.m to 2 p m lad•es
Home League all women mvtte d 1 30
p m prayer meeting and Btble study
Rev Noel HermOn teacher
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEL Route 1, Shade B1ble scMool 7
p m Thursday worshtp servace 8 p rn
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST 200 W Mo.n~.St 992· 5235. Vocal
mustc Sund&lt;ij'-\MOfshrp, ' 10 o .m · ltble
'!ifudy 11 a m worsh1p 6 p m Wedne s
day Bible study 7 p m
OlD DEXTER
BIBLE
CHRISTIAN
" CHURCH Rev.Ralph Smtih pastor Sun
day school 9 30 o m
Mrs Worl ey
Fronc1s supenntendent Preachmg ser
t. 1ces hnt&amp; ftmd Sundays lollow~ng Sun
day School.
•~ ... • '
GRAHAM
UNI TED
METHODIST
Preochmg 9 30 o m
l1nt and second
Sundays of each month t~urd ond fourth
Sundays each month worshtp ser\lrce ot
7 30 p .m . :,Yedhesday evenrngs ot 7 JO
Prayer ond Bible Study
SEVENT .. DAY ADVENTIST Mulberry
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pastor A lbert
011tes, Sabbath School Superrntendent
Rtlo White Sobbath School Sa turday
afternoon at '1 00. w1th Worsh1p Ser\ltCe
lollow1ng ol 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Stster Harnett Worner Supt Sunday
School q 30 a m . morntng worshtp
t'O 45 a .m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Do-.d
Mar'\n . mtnllter Wrlllom Watson Sunday
schdol supt Sunday school , q 30 am
morntng worshtp 10 30 am
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST
282
Mulberry Av e Pomeroy , Rev W1llrom
R Newman pastor Her1hel McClure
Sunday school supenntendent , Sunday
set-tool , '30 am . morn1ng worshtp
· 10.30, even1ng worshtp , 7 30 p m
MtdwHk prayer servtce, 1 30 p m
' MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, De.
ter ftd ., Rd , Lang, ville, Rev A A
Hugtlet. Pastor . Sunday School I 0 a m
Services on Tuesday Thursday and Sun·
doy 7 30p .m.
." FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Booley
Run Rood . RtN . Emmett Rowson pastor
1
,
,
Sundoy scMool , 10
s.,-v, ~ e 7 30 Bible

w

•• 992-3451

We Fill Doctors'

•m·SilO PomerOY

ul Uuo&lt;l oll&lt;f Mndol_, .., Pt&lt;l~r•
r •n• "" ''~· ·~~'""'""'~ulonl&lt;"\l
, '' ' ' '' oh. • I I ,.., ~ "'""'

"" In~,,~, d ow do•• I~ &lt; 1, 11

282

SWISHER &amp;
PHARMACY

214EMa•n

THE BIBLE LOVER'S DREAM COME TRUE!

Pract1ce for a ceremomal was set
for July ?:/ at 7 30 p m at the
or so
Pomeroy Masomc Temple when
Mary Shrme 37, Order of the White
Shrme of Jerusalem, met recently at
the Temple.
The ceremomal will be held on
Sept. 11 at 8 p.m . A s1lent auctiOn
w1ll be held followmg the July 27
presented by Mrs Beuna Grueser
meetmg .
For Hemlock Grove, Mrs. Mune l
Marg1e Cartwnght, worthy high
Bradford used a patnotasm theme.
pnestess, and Donald Yoho, watThere were facts on the flag , a skit
chman of shepherds, presided at the
by Sarah Collums, Wallace Bradmeetmg w1th coiTUDumcatiOns bemg
ford, Helen QuJvey, Leota Smith.
read.
InvitatiOns were received
J ess1e White and Robert Reed
from Gmdmg Star Shrine 31, St.
Readmgs mcluded " What Does
Louis, Mo.; Galilee Gutding Shnne
Amenca Mean to You" by Mrs
41, and McKmley Shrme 54,
Bradford. • Like a Flag' by NamOJ
W1loughby , to attend receptiOns. It
Reed, "Om Country" by Dons East- was voted durmg the meeting to
man. and the song , "Grand Old - renut dues of all members m norsmg homes.

John F Fultz, Mgr.
Ph . 9922TUI
Pomeroy

Reuter-Brogan Insurance
Services
'

r-;:::;;;;;;;=====::;;::=:::;-

Mary Shrine
sets practice

ft) iI

•

,,. ~

~lNG IDJSE ~

The Lad1es AUJuliary of the hre
department met Wednesday evemng
at the firehouse with president
Charlotte Snuth presiding. The
meehng opened w1th " The Lord's
Prayer" followed by the pledge to
the flag Mmutes of the previOus
meetmg were read by Clan~ Allen
and the treasurer's report by Opal
Hollon There were no committee
Opal E1chmger and Laura ~creports given. New comrruttees
were named for the year. Roll call cpmpamed Mr and Mrs. Charles
was answered by Opal Hollon, Inzy Eichinger and Suzannah to Virgima
Newell, Opal Wickham, D1xie Bea1r, Beach for a few days vacation.
Clara Conroy , Clance Allen, Erma
Mrs Larry Cleland and Greg and
Cleland and Charlotte Snuth. After Mary H1bbs spent a week w1th Mr
the business meetmg, games were and Mrs. Hibbs in Tampa, Fla.
played and watermelon was served
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Meek and
by Dll&lt;ie Beair
daughter, Mt. Sterling, Ky , spent a
A group of neighbors enjoyed a week with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
w1ener roast Tuesday evening at the Newell and family.
home of Mr and Mrs Showalter At- ,------------....1..--~~--------­
tendmg were Mr. and Mrs Nat Car-

TERMITE

~'IHE

St.

'0

and Church
" MEIGS nRE

Chester News Notes

'Par~

CONTROL

- ~-' ­

co

Hold shower

DANCING FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

ARAB

Angela
Brendll

Becky Reed, BWy Francis, Susie
Francts, Ml8sy Harris, Wesley san-

Two area granges recently
pass deputies' joint inspection
A JOIDt 1nspect10n of the Heml ock
Grange and the Rock Spnngs
Grange was conducted by Mr and
Mrs Mendall Jordan, deputies , last
week at the Rock Spnngs hall Both
granges rece1ved good grades from
the 1nspectmg officers .
Dunng the meetmg the Rock
Spnngs Grange draped the charter
m memory of Mrs Ruth Euler New
lights have been mstalled m the hall
and the Grange extended thanks to
the members who donated on the

REt

St. Paul's Church concludes VBS

Preserve
'n 'Serve
Sauerkraut IS sunple and mexpenslve to prepare, but your mvestment of t1me and mgred1ents
can eas1ly be lost through spoilage 1!
effecllve procedures are not used
The followmg procedure recommended by the U S Department of
Agnculture has been cons1slently
successful
For 16 to 18 quarts of kraut, the
only mgred1ents needed are about 50
pounds of fmn, mature cabbage and
one pound of granulated pickling
sail F irst. the green outer leaves
a nd a ny damaged portwns are tnrnmed away Green leaves y~eld
~ellow kraut
these leaves and
decayed portiOns of the cabbage
may bear h1gh numbers of undesirable bactena that spoil the
kraut
After washmg and quartenng the
heads the core IS removed. The core
may be mcluded m the slaw 1f 1t IS
shredded hnely, otherwise, •t w1ll be
a chewy component of the kraut
A s harp kmfe or a shredder may
be used to cut the cabbage mto th1 n
shreds about the th1ckness of a
mckle Often usmg the shredder
results m a more umform product
Attachments available for food
processors and m1xers may be used
to cutthe slaw.
The cabbage 1s we1ghed out m five
pound amounl• usmg a household
scale
In a large bowl or pan. three
tablespoons of salt are sprmkled
over each five pounds of cabbage
slaw Exact propor!Jons of salt and
cabbage are needed for proper fermentatwn P1cklmg salt can be used
successfully
IodiZed salt may
discolor the kraut.
The salt IS 1mxed thoroughly w1th
the shredded cabbage, and the mixlure 1s allowed to stand for about
f1ve rmnutes to draw out JUices and
to Wilt the cabbage for eas1er
packmg
The salted cabbage IS packed
evenly and f1rmly mto a c lean, five
gallon crock or Ja r Usmg a large

,.

,

,..,,
,,

'"

'

ko
..,,li,

.

•
'

�Pta-8-The Da•ly Sentmel

Pomeroy

Friday, July 17,,911

Meddleport, Ohio

Small investment, large returns, Senintel Want Ads
Public Notice
NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
The Board ot Educatoor

o the Me gs L ocal School

'
D1strtct
des• res to rece ve.
sealed
b1ds
tor the
fOllOWing
1 Student ac c 1dent n

sura nee
1 Fleet nsurance
3 T res and tubes
.c Gasoline o 1 and ant
treeze

Public Nollce
Holls Hock ng
Valley

Regional
Development
D1str ct Area Agenc y on
410 St
Cia r
A g ng 8
Building 216 Putnam Sl
Maflet1a Oh1o 45750 Con
tact M1ss Cmdy Parsons
M ss Molly Varner and
M1ss Sandra Wise 6 u 374

9436

(7) 17 ltc

5 Fuel 011

ts

6 Coal
7 M1lk and da ry produ c

B Bre a d
products
9 Meat

an d

bak ery

10
Produce and dry
goods
In order to be cons dered

al sea ed b ds shall be
rece ved m t he Off ce at the

Tr easurer
South Th rd
Avenue M dd eport Oh o
on or befor e 12 00 o cloc k
noon on August 17 1981
The Board of Educat 1on

reserves the r ght to accept

or r e ec t arty and a n b ds

Jane Wagner

Treasu re r

Me gs L oc a l

Sc hoo D str c r
Sourh Th rd Avenue
M d d leport Oh o

45760

( 7) 17 24 31

3tc

Pubhc Not ce
PUBLIC NOT CE
Pub ! c Announcemen t s
made by Buc keye H Is
Hock ng Val ey Regtona
Oevelopmen D st r ct that
pr oposa s lor fund ng un
der T ti e I I at the Older
A me can s A c t o 1965 as
a n c nded a r e be ng ac
cep ted Th e se rv ce area
e n c o mpa sses
Ath e n s
Hoc k ng M e gs M onroe
Morgan Nob e Perry and
Wo1s h ng ton Count es
n
Oh o Fund s a r e cwa abe
on a mat c h ng ba s s tor
soc a a nd nu tr ton ser
v ccs an d mu lf pu rpose
t ac 1 t es
Sen or Cent e
F unds w 11 be awarded tor
the pe r od
J.J nuary
1
throug h D ece mber 31 1987
Dead! ne for proposal sub
m ss on s Ju ly 31 1981
F or mats and further n
l orm n t on m ay be obta ned
bY c on ta ct ng Buck eye
In Memonam

Pubhc Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Me gs County Coun
C I on Aging Inc WhiCh IS a
pr vale nonprof t c or
porat1on 1ntends to subm t
an appl ca t on for a cap tat
grant under the prOVISIOn
of Sect on 16 (bl (2) at the
Urban
Mass
Tran s
port at on Ac t of 1964 as
amended to prov de trans
portal on se rv ce for th e
and / or
han
elder ly
d c apped w th n Me g s
County
The 9 ant ap
pi cat 1on w II request two
14 passenger vans
It IS pro\ect ed that 150
ldup l c ated
elderly an d
hand capped w II use the
serv ce 5 day s per week for
var 1ous
a ct v1f es
n
cl u d ng tran sporta t1 on to
med cal fa c I t es soc a
serv ce and governmenta
agenc 1es
and shopp n g
ce nters
The Me gs Cou nty Coun
c I on Ag ng Inc mv res
and or
c omments
proposa l s from a ll
n
teres ted pub c
pr vat e
and paratran s1t operator s
1nc ud ng tax operators
for !he prov d ng of tran s
port a t on serv ce for th e
e lder l v
and / o r
han
d 1capped w th n our se r
v ce area
Opera tor s who ar e n
t e re ste d
n
of l er ng
proposa s to prov de ser
v ce
shou l d
c ont ac l
E e anor
Thomas
Execut ve D r ec or Me gs
Coun t y Counc on Ag ng
nc at Box 722 Mu berry
He gh ts
Pom er oy
Oh a
45769 to o b t~ n full deta Is
of the type of
trans
porrat on sf" rv C€' that s
needed pr or to prepar ng a
proposal
Wr tt en
comme nt s
and or proposa ls must be
subm tted w th n 30 days to
the agency at the above ~d
d r ess w t h a copy to th e
Oh o Department of Tra ns
port at on Bureau of Publ c
T anspor t at on 25 Sout h
Co umbus
F on t Str ee t
Oh o 4J:ll5
A tte nt on
Trans I
Resour ce
Manager
17 10 17 1A Jt c
PubliC Nottce

PUBLIC NOTIC E

n Memory Of
Our Son

James Aaron Brewer
Whom God ca ll ed hom e
July 17 19 79 two years
ago Sa dl y m1 ssed by h1 s
Mommy
Daddy
brothers
Chari e and
Tr.av1s
grandparents
1u nt s
uncles
&lt;'~n d
cous ns

Not ce s hereby g VE"n
th at the v 1 age of Pomeroy
has made app l ca t on to the
Un ted States Depa rtmen t
of Agr cu ltu e Farmer s
Hon e Ad m n strat on tor
I nanc a l ass stance n or
der to restore and renovate
!he
Old Pomeroy H gh
School
for use as rhe
V ag e Hat! Tne prore c t
wou d be w th n the boun
dar es o l and have n n a t
fee t on a f oodp la n
The purpose at th s not ce
s to obi a n com m en s tram
I he general pub c on 1)
The mpa c l s o f oca t ng the
p o ec I w lh n the den
tit ed lloodp an 2) Alt er
n r1 t ve p o ec t s tes and 3
Methods of .wo d ng o
educ ng f oodp la n
m
pa c ts and hazar ds shou d
t here be no pract cable
a llerna veto the propc.::.ed
pro1 ec s te
Th e proposed prot ect s
ocat ed on Sta te Rout e 33

r-----------------------

1I Curb Inflation.
l Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Public Notice

Any party wtsh ng to
comment on the proposal
should prov de wntten
c omments w th n 30 days
from the date of th s not1ce

to

L aurence G
Bowman
Chef
Commun tv
Programs
Un 1ted States Depart
ment of Agr culture
Farmers
H o m e Ad
m n stra on
00 N H gh St r eet Room
5Q 7

Columbus Oh o 432 15
516 173 t c
Public Not1ce

NOTICE TO B IDDE RS
REPA R OF ROOFS
IN
ME GS LOCAL
SCH OOL DISTRICT
Sealed proposa ls w II be
rece 1ved by the Board at
Educat on of the Me gs
Local School 0 stfl ct of
M ddleporr
Oh o at the
Treasurers Off ce unt I
12 00 Noon on Augus t 4
198 1 and at that t me
ope ned an d r ead by the
Treasurer to sad Board at
ts nex t mee t ng
Oeser pt on
of
m
provement
lo c ated
at
Rutland
E l eme nt ary
Sc h oo
Harr so nv li e
E l e m entary
Sc h oo
Sa l sb u ry
E l e m ent ary
School M e gs Jun or H g h
School and Sa lem Cen ter
E lem entary Schoo l The
Roof ng Cont r ac tor sha ll
b d as a Pr me Contractor
Th s ncludes a 1 labor
mater als equ pment and
serv ces r equ red to corn
plete th s Sec t on wh ch n
eludes new replace m ent of
roofs o n M dd l epor t
E emen t ary
s c n oo l
H a r sonv lie E ementary
Sa l sb u ry
E l e m e ntary
Me gs Jun or H gh Schoo l
and Sa lem Center Elemen
tary School 6 dder s w 1 be
b dd ng on th e 1nsta llat1o n
of the T r oca t roof ng
sy~ t em A ll r oo fs to be b d
sepa a te y an d together
Deta ed
spec f ca t ons
and nstru ct ons to b dders
may be obt a ned at t he Of
f ce- of the Treasurer M d
dleport Oh o
A
Cer t f ed
c he c k
payab e to th e Treasurer of
th e
a b ov e
board
of
educa t on or a sa t stactory
b d bond executed by the
b dder and t he surety co m
pany n an amount equal to
f ve percen t of the b d sha ll
be subm1 teo With each b d
Sa d board of ed ucat on
r~e r ves the r ghf to wa ve
nfof"~al t es to ac cept o r
retect any a nd a l or parts
of a ny and a ll b oo;
No b ds m ay be w th
drawn for at leas t th rty
( 30 )
days
a ft er
th e
sc heduled c los ng t me tor
rece pt of b ds
Board of Educat on
of M e gs Loca I
Schoo l D str ct
lane Wagne Tr eas urer
Sou th T h rd Avenue
M ddteport Oh o 45760

171 3 10 17 24 4tc

6
7

8
9

10'------

11
12
13
14
15
16

1

l

n Mfmo o~~m
Annovncemenh

•

G \IUWoliY

S H•ppy

re ce v ed
bv
th e
un
cl('rs qned Treasurer of the
Board of Educa t on of the
Me gs
Lo c al
Scho o l
0 str ct Cou nt y at Me g s
Oh o South Th rd Aven ue
M ddlepor Oh o 45760 un
1 l :l OU noon a t he th en
pr eva 1 ng loc a l sta nda r d
t 1mf' n Oh o on A ug u st 17
11,18
al w t ch I me a nd
p ace th e b ds w 1 be
publ el y opened and r ead
for th e pur chase at Sc hool
nprovement Bond s
of
sa d board ot educat on n
tht.' pr nc pa l amount of

000 000

Mob le

44

H om &amp;~

Nfn

Apa

lm f nl ~

fo Rrn

sned li!ooms
4• Space or Rent
4~

Ad~

47
48

Furn

Wtnlfd to Rfnl
E QU pmt&gt;n o R l'ft

e MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SER~ICES
I

H e PWollnl~

1
IJ

5 tu• ed Wollin led

4

IJ
'

lnsurollonc e
8u1 nus T 1 n nq
Schools lnn ru c t on
ll o!io dO TV
&amp;CBilf"po!io

MoUStho d Gooch
S2 CB T V lh(l o fqu pmf-nl
Sl Ant que'
54 M sc Merch.11n11 se
55 Bu ld nlJ Supp f
Sit

Peh to 5•

~~~~!f,~~:i}:~i~~~:t~~;i

Monday Fflday
4 p m to 11 p m
All Day Saturd.ly

PH. 949-2285
Loc a ted at Maplewood
Latw 1n Rae me
7 17 1 mo

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
Af t types of roof work
new or repa1r gutters
.a nd downspouts gutter
cl ea nmg and pa nf1ng
All work guaranteed
Free E st1mat es
Reasonable Pn ces
Cali Howard
949 1862

Bul nun

n

L vuto (k

11

Oppor un tv
12 Money to Loan

64

H•'l

u

n

ll

P

St

ofeu

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE
1 Homtt o Siilll!
U Mobtle Homes
fo S11r
ll Folio '"' or ~ollo l •

71

"
'4

15

Auto' tor S• te
V•n,&amp;4W O

MoloreyciiH
Auto Pir 1
&amp;

H - Bu' ness au d ngs

11

Acuno es

Aulo Rep•

want Ad Advert1s1ng
Deadltnes
Mona•y 2 3o on s.uur!Ny

31

TuUIIIy "'ru Fr dly 2 JO P M
"'•day t..tor• pubi cat on
Surtd.n 1 Jf P M Pr d•y

34

e SERVICES

&amp; Rt fr g1ro11
U- Genero~l

C. R. Mash
Construction

r-

u, to 1J wOrds
Up lo IS worcb

on

16- M M RtPII

f1-UphOIII•n

uprouwords

on• d•'l insert Gil
tl'lre• Cloly nstrtlon

• xdo~ ys nsert1on

Averttt 4 words ~r 1 nt)

MoD

we would like to express
our deepest thanks for the
donations we received
from the following chur
ches Pleasant Valley liar
vey Chapel
Gods Will
Tabernacle Lighthouse on
Chestnut
Ridge
presbyterian
Tabor
people on Leon Baden Road
and Ten Mile area and
Thomas Rodge and our
familoes Thanks for all the
prayers
May God Bless
y
0
u

L/.FF- A- DAY

r-

....'"'
u 00

'" 0 "'' 111 •unc~vut~talturuccottllclllywut~u•l'lwHI'I

;~::~...25 Ctftt chertt lor teh&lt;nrry .,, 8011 ~l.lfl'llfr In Cart ol Tl'lt
TIM P111tlisl'ler rt~trv•s tM r thllo Rut or rtltcf II'IY •dt d" "'"

efaltd Dlttl The P'ubllslltr w II nat IN rltpot~SIItlt for mertl,..n on•

-~~m~:o! _o~~~~'~------ _J IL -'-"'_"_'""__'_"_•·-·-"-'"------..----------:.....l

Wilber

and

Verner

Stephens

992 2478

Announcements

SWEEPER alld sewtng
machine repair parts and
supplies
Pick up and
delivery Davis Vacuum
Cleaner one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446-0294
Reduce safe &amp; fast wllh
GoBese Tablets a. E Vap
Water pills Gillingham
Drug Galllpqlos OH
Cleland Greenhouse IS now

open
Vegetable plants
tomato plants
bedding
plants pots and hangtng
baskets
Geraldone
Cleland Racone Ohio

and

Giveaway

Small hght tan female PIIP
py very playful
loves
children
Phone 304 675
5S06
ONE black three year old
collie female
gentle
Phone JO.t 675 20-48
COCKER Span el
304 &lt;158 1669

Phone

EVERYBODY
Shops the

General

985 3965
7 15 1 mo pd

meeting

LONELY
Christian
Singles Meet Christian
singles lnyour area Write
Southern Christian Singles
Club PO Box 18:13 Sum
mervllle SC 2943 or call 1
803 871 9850 24 hours
4

Real Estate

or
Blatne Mtlhoan

a

cleanup work session Mon
day July 20th starting at
5 30 p m Bring your own
eats All members urged to
attend We need your help
Roy Howell

PULliNS
EXVACATING

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Custom K tch ens Ap
pllanc es
Custom
8athrooms Remodehn
g Plumbtng Electr c
Heat ng

Free Estimates
992-6011
992-7656

WANT AD WAY

cultrng that boa1.11 In half'

To good home 13 ma old
446-0769

6 tiger kittens
8771

Call 388

COLLIE and Coonhound
Puppies 992 2770
4

Lost •nd Found

Lost
Cocker Spaniel
IIOiden brown With summer
haircut ans to name Lady
Please call after 7PM 367
05-45
FOUND Black dog big 1
white spont or chest Looks
like Labrador Retriever
992 21&lt;13
SlOO 00 reward tor 1n
formation
leading
to
whereabouts of long hair
black border collie Male
with wl&gt;lte markings
Wh1te ring around neck

breast and front legs Hind
legs while from haulk
down White on tip of tall
Call Earl Shephard 614
378 6152 Reedsvolle Ohio
FOUND Light brown dog
looks like part husky
Black dog with brown feet
Forst house In Bashan on
left
Tuppers
Eddoe Russell
Pia ns
You
German
Shepher has returned to
Rutland Please come &amp;
get h1m

TOM HOSKINS

RADIATOR
SERVICE
FrOm
th e Smallest
Hea ter Cor e to the
lar gest Radiator
Radtator Spec1ai1SI

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Y r s Expenence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.
Pomeroy OH
99 2 2174

Ph

• Backhoe
• EJ~ cavat1ng
• Sephc Systems
• Water Sewer &amp;
&amp;as Ltnes
• Dump frud
• rrencher
L1censed &amp; Bonded

PH 992-7201

57 tfc

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS
EUGENE LONG
F r(' C E Sf m.lt £! ~
C 'Ill Collect
~43

3322

Park St
Mtddleport, Oh
Ph 992 6263
Anyteme

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

No Sunday Ca ll s
3 II tf (

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Housing
Headquarters

Vmyl&amp;
Alumtnum Stdmg
•
•
•
•

- Auto and Truck
Repa1r
- Transmtss1on
Repaer
Hrs Mon Fre
9am530pm

1nsulafton
Storm Doors
Storm Windows
Replacement
Wtndows

Free Est1mate
James Keesee
Ph 992 2772

Let GE"Orge M ller r hec k
your present dectncal
sys tem
Res d ent at
&amp;Commercral

Mtddleport, Oh
Ph 992 501 6
Or 992•7505
11--- - - - - - • -l_J_t_tc..J

~IRGIL B SR LL!
216 E Second Street

Phone

NEW LISTING -

992 5682

ALL STEEL

equopped b rch kotchen

Farm BuHdmgs

fu11
basement
w1th
t a m ly room hot water
neat copper plumbing
garage and 3 acres

Snes
From JOxJo

Ask ong 565 000
PLAYTIME

UbliiJ BulldiRgs

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rf 3 80)( 54
Racme Oh

Rt 1 S1de Hill Rd
Rvfland OhiO

Ph 614 843 2S91
6 15 Tf c

PH 742 24SS

5 II tic

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes
ex

BRICK RANCH -

heat equ pped k1t

APPLIANCE SERVICE

large

eo~

eO ~ po ~ill\
•D s ftw&lt;~ s ht' ,

•v

•

nqt!~

R cp

FREE

nq S nee J95J

Apt

6 3 1 mo

Mou ~e

1 C!o

Owncn

Mob It' Homl' P•rlt'&gt;

GAS

~

-

Save

On corner rentable

Broker

tal nvestment property
apartment house WIth
three 2 bedroom apart
ments
each
w1th
separate utll1ftes and
entrance Glazed block
bu ldtng with
I ttle
mamtenance Excellent
cond1t on S2.ot 500 00

NEW

clud ong 1 75
$42 000 00
EASTERN

acres

throughout 5 bedrooms
bath
ltvtng
room
d n1ng room
f amily
room moder n ktfchen
w1th breakfast room
Also e)(tra n ce 24 x 44

workshop S37 500 00
NEW LISTING
Near
M ddleport oil Rt 7
Re modeled 3 bedroom
home hvtng room ktf
che n
utlltty
bath
cellar on 2
acres w th
fru t trees and grape ar

bor $1600000
LOAN ASSUMPTION -

DISTRICT

23 acres w1th a
vanety of land There IS
a gorgeous buildtng S1te
bOttom land
t1mber
land wtth some oak t1 m
ber and a small stream
Utll1t es
available

$1800000
RANCH HOME IN THE
COUNTRY Just 4
years old w fh a large
kttchen
3 bedrooms
Uf1hfY room
an af
tached garage and a
detached garage over
an acre that IS partly
fenced and n ce laymg

land S39 900 00
HANDYMAN S SPECI
AL - Has a b g lot and a

lrort porch garage and
p,. a Cres appro•
$16 200 00
STOP IN AND SEE
PICTURES OF OUR 80
DIFFERENT PROPE
RTIES
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES

utoloty

on

315

acre Askm g $3:1 000 00

NEW HOME -

Noce 3

bedroom
a ll electr c
large l1v1ng room ktt
c hen and d1nmg comb
bath
ca rport
and
storage on l a r ge corner
lot
Pr,ce
reduced

$J8 500 00
FARM - 72 acres large
~ story hom e
3 or 4
bedrooms
'J baths
I v1ng room modern k1t
chen
c arport
and
w orkshop
Barn w th
electr c1ty a nd wafer

PRICE REDUCED
537 000 00
Velma Necensky Assoc

Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley Assot
Phone 742 3171
54

Mise Merchandise

BIG APPUANCE
SALE AT
POMEROY

~
&amp;14 992 2181

Roger &amp; Dott1e Turner

Freezers
Refngerators

992 S692

washei!S Dryers
A1r Cpndthoners
Also

several
Repossessed &gt;1 GOOD
Pr1ces

FINAL CLOSEOUT
OF SHRUBS
Make An Offer

YARD SA~E Hull Art Pol
tery oak rocker old lam
ps desk kitchen table sad
dies toys books clothes
etc Thurs
Fro &amp; Sat
(16 17 18)
1st and
Raolroad Bidwell 388 9710
YARD SALE 15 16 &amp; 17 al
Thurman
bes1de
t re
stat1on

Tools

clothtng

Tools

cloth1ng

and

household otems
Yard Sale 1 4110 mole off St
Rt 7 on 218 Lots of Avon
bottles farm mach nerv
and clothing July 17th &amp;
18th
MOVING SALE 275 Le
Grande Blvd (Green Acres
Sub l Monday July 20 1981
from9 5
Fro &amp; Sal
17 18 For.t
road on left after passmg
WMPO radio slatlor Raon
cancels

Garage Sale July 17 &amp; 18
Frl a. Sat at Mrs Allen

Ternfic

garage

Mulberry Ave

im

sale

Household

Items Two chances Frl &amp;

Sat 10 4
4 family vard sale July 17 &amp;
18 at Stobart s Greenhouse
Co Rd 100 Ctolhong (all
sozesl antiques old bot
ties
Avor dolls (fulll
mise

Yard Sale Langsville Post
Office turn right stay on
hardtop First land right
Crouser Rd

•

invitations

anti
accessoriu
Reasonably
priced
quick service
-Look
obligation

Bob, Cha r1ene
and Jav.ne
Hoeflic.l)
109 High 51 • ~orner&lt;!Y

EXCEUINT SALAI!tY AND BENEFITS
1

"

COntact
I l

I

lllfKior of Nursing
........, lfal.. y ltospital

I

RUMII
AJifMUIE
·
Malft lt.
742•221
i

I

1r

fully

1 acre of

ground located 1 mile out

7040
PUB L IC
AUCTION
TUESDAY JULY 21 5 30
p m
611 NEAL ST
PARKERSBURG WV 2
BLOCKS OFF CAMDEN
AVE
ANTIQUES AND
COLLECTABLES
Oak
secretary
stack book
cases press back chairs
tables
desks
victrola
Walnut youth bed curio
cabinet
pie crust
organ stool
full table,
bed
sewing cabinet
Wicker
baby

stroller

rocker

baskets butter mold cigar
molds dolls toys brass
dovetail boxes many pic
lures and frames clock
parts tools phon! parts
student lamp and others
records stained glass 10
glass baskets 30 marked
and unmarked stone jars
Dan Mercer Nice selection
post cardo a. books Mcgut
tv Zane Gray alld others
Guns 1892 Marlin Stevens
model .u &amp; model 1917 20
guage double 6 5 Krag &amp;
more
1973
Ford
automobile new line par
tlal

listing

much

much

more Owners Bob &amp; Judy
Dickel Sale by Kong Kole
Auction Service Ken Cole
3~

Auct1oneer
428 2661
9

273 9424 or

Older home In the country
with 2 3 acres 4 bedrooms

bath

~~~;;;;;~~~;:;:::;~~~~~;;;~;~~ 2711
move
w led
M
t .L
22
elp an
oney 0 oan
WANTED Lease men to FHA VA Convenloal Home
leasae oil alld gas proper Loans
Columbus Forst
ties GAll a and surroun Mortgage Co 463 Second
ding counlles Inquire to Ave Galiopqlls Dh .&amp;46
Great Bend Oil 1nc 269 7172
Lower
River
Rd
Gal hpol! s Cali 4.c6 4285
23
Professional
H

11

Into Phone J0.4 576
- - -- - -- - 1978 Sw1nger one and one
half bath loreplace Phone
lOA 675 5672 2 m les out
Jerocho
2 bedroom atr cond1t10ned
furn1shed out of town on

RI 2 Sma II deposot Phore
304 67S 6277

Serv1ces

Wofh the Army National
Guard you II have a part
lome 1ob w th full t ime
benefits You woll attend

tra.ning one weekend each
month and two weeks each
year Benef1ts tnclude low
cost life tnsurance
ex
cellent pay and a free pen

S1on plan Plus the Armv
Guard s valuable techn cat
school1no w ll prepare you
for a well pay1ng c v111an

Part time (4 hours a week)

RegiStered Nurse ( R N I to
work In intermediate care

facll ty for the mentally
retarded
Part t1me Licensed Prac

local

Nurse

!LPNI

to

d spense med1catton to
res.tdent s of
an
n
termed1afe care fac111ty for

the

mentally

retarded

Hours vary depending on
when med1cat1on needs to
be dtspensed Please con
tact John Lehew .446 1642

256 19671n theevemngs

ext 332

FEATHER BEDS WAN
TED ANY CONDITION
MISC BOX 65 AURORA
IND 47001 GIVE DIREC
TION WILL CALL SOON

Country Rock Band needs
drummer &amp; base player
Own equ1pment a must

Ca II 4.c6 3808
JOB

COMMERCIAL and on
dustnal
phOtography
Phone .c.46 2909 or 4.c6 7226
after4p m

OPPORTUNITY

20

hrs week coord inator van
dnver w th the Ret1red
Semor Volunteer Program

of Roo Grande College Ap

For sale or rent 9 room

house Park Dr ve $325 per
month Phone 304 675 288S
Mobele Homes
for Sale

32

P ano tumng and repa r
Love your ne1ghbor tune
your P1ano
B1ll Ward

wards Keyboard 4.c6 072
Galllpol s
GALLIA
onsured

PRICE S REDUCED

used

mob1le homes and travel

Ira lers
TRISTATE
MOBILE HOME S CALL
446 7S72

Clean ng

Rent A Mad Serv1ce Inc
Free Esftmates bonded

SCASH
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
420LIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL
4.c6 4775
DPEN9TD5

1 000 bales of hay must b e
able to del1ver Phone .c.411
ol053

mines

OR RENT almost new 14 x
70 3 bedroom 1 v, baths
sitt ing on noce lot ready to

Wanted to Buy

kinds Cllll Kenneth Swam

Centrally

to all l

$17 500 742 2502

10b Call675 3950

WANT TO BUY Old fur
noture and Antoques of all

garage

located

phone

245 9234

Cleaning by the week mon
thor contrllctual
Complete Au ct1on Serv1ce
stock reducf1on c lose outs
estates farm equ pment h
vesfock real estate L1 ce n
sed and bonded 1n Oh o

and West WV Bud McGhee
Auct1on and Real Estate

Co Call for terms 4.c6 0552
or .&amp;46 0818 428 Second
Ave Gall pelts OH

45631

ROBERTS
CON
STRUCTION CO Inc Out
trademark
Qual ty &amp;
Sa t1sfact1on
We have
references Phone 256 1.560
P ano and Organ lessons
I m1ted opentngs
Mary

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOB I LE
HOME SALES
4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS RT
35 PHONE 446 3868 or .&amp;46
7274
1980 double wode mob•le
home 3 bdr 2 full baths
l1k e
new
S16 SOD
Negotoable Call 256 6345
73 Granv111e 2 bdr awn ng
a r cond good cond Call

446 2651 or 446 0876
72 lnde 12x60 mobole home
79 Dodge van a 1Bx36
garage

3 llcres of land

$16000 00 or best offer Call
388 8747
1974

New

M oon

M ob tle

Lucas call446 9787

Hom e Call4.c6 97S9

Your P ano rust ng 1n sum
mer Hum1d1ty? Fr ee m
specfton w1th tun ng Lane

1973 Crown Haven 14x 65
three bedroom new car

CASH PAID for clean late
model used cars Smith
Buick Pontiac GAIIopqlts
Ohoo Call.&amp;46 2282

pi cation forms may be ob

Want to buy good used one
owner car w1fh low mileage

College

pi cation s Juiv 2-4th

and want to buy baby
calves Phone after 7 00
PM 379 2160

&amp; Cllble toots usually wells
tn 1 day Call Ray Beagle

$185 00 toS500 week IV doing

304 895 3841

two bedroom new carpet
B &amp; S Sales Inc 2nd and

mailing work
No ex
per.ence requ1red
AP

STARKS Tree Trommong &amp;

V and Street PI Pleasant
wv Phone675 4424

ta1ned at RSVP coor
dlnallng desk In Gallopol s
Sen1or Citizen Center of at

Daniels
2082

742 2951 or 992

the affoce at ll a Grande

BEDS I RON
furniture

dollars

BRASS
gold

old

sliver

wood Ice boxes

stone Iars antiques

CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1ameter u
on largest
end $12 50 per ton Bundled
slab
$10 50 per ton
Dellverd to Ohoo Pallet Co
Rock
Sprongs
Rd
Pomeroy 992 2689
old

PLY Circle Sales P 0
Box 224 D Rochmond Holl
NY 1Ul8

Pomeroy

some great g fts as a Sen
ttnel route earner Phone
us right away and get on

week

Staggard 304 773 5897
t2

solver

sterl ng
1ewelry rings old co1ns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop Mlddleporl 992
3476
HARPER
HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CO 11th and
Voand Street now buying
metals lcopper brass
lead stainless

custom

6309

REAR end for 77 L TO
Phone 304 675 5&lt;110

-.......

........, ..

'"
" "'

or

small

peted 2 barns 379 2258 or
379 23&lt;43 alter 6PM
New 3 bdr hou se w th
garage and full basement

$4S 000 Call.f-46 0390
3 bdr home k1t d nmg
rm
ltv1ng rm
Wtth
fireplace
large fam ly
room w tfh woodburner 1

1/ 2

baths

675 2.&amp;40
will

mow

lawns

Woman will babystt tn my

fenced

on

backyard
n ce bar b q
area and c1ty schools Call

home PhoneJ0-4 675 6120

9%

assumable loan on
roomy 3 bdr home Wtth
large tam 1ty room new
carpet central a1r and

pool with deck Situated an
acre

lof

1n

good

Opportunity Is yours lust
for the ask lng Ask your
Beeline stylist and She will
be happy to help you join
the Beeline world of
fashion and succns Phone
992 3941 btlween the hOurs
off 6

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been
celled?
Lost

IN
can

your
operators License? Phone

992 21&lt;0

ne1gh

house

basement

shower AC stove refrlg
curtains carpet garage

shade trees proced $39 000
Located Rl 160 &amp; ss.l Wtli
land contract Call 388 8200

Radto TV
&amp; CB Repair

Hause 4 rm bath garage
on Mill Creek Rd l/4 acre
ground Phone 4-16 0054

RON S T~ SERVICE
Speclallz ng on Zenith
House Calls Now servlcong
Motorola Quazar Call 1
31M 576 2398 or .c.46 2454

6 rm &amp; bath on large lot
Oak H1ll
washer &amp;
dryer atr cond Call 682
7414after IPM

16

11

Wanted to Do

0 J s LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Neigh
borhOOd Rd all makes ser
voced Specializing I~ Lawn
Boy
Blades sharpened
Call .c.46 4425 after 5 p m
Pick up and delivery
av,ilable

3391. .Zottat!'lville

-...

' '

weekend ~ Phorit !104 372

mow a three
Rt 2 at
make hay
want
lum•r

'

21

"

.....
.. . . .

Builntss
Opp!!j!unlry

576

1971 Daroan
b edrooms

12 x 65
1972

3

Crown

expando 3 bedrooms 1973
Utop1a 12 )( 65 2 bedrooms
1972 Invader U x 70 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau 14

x 60 2 bedrooms

B

• S

Sales Inc 2nd and V1and

Sts PI Pleasant
Phone675 «24

WV

Tra ler tor sale or renf
par tly furntshed Galt polis

Ferry Ph0ne304 675 1867
67 12x60 mob le
Phone675 4898

hOme

borhood Ca II .&amp;46 7535
3 bdr

600 McNeil, Pt Pleasant,
SeturdiY
Monday
Tu..S.y
9 5 Clarinet

rwa.

USED Mobile Home

2711

69 Yellowstone
Insurance

woman to stay will\ elderly
ildY In CollaatWIIe qn

wv

12)(60 Buddy 3 bedroom
furmshed
central air
wash er dryer awntng un
derp1nn ng Set up m Coun
trv Mobile Home Park
S5 900 992 7A79

Haven 14 x 65 Wllh 8 x 10

446 2003

and remodeling Phone 304

13

copper kettles and other
types of antoques Phone
.c.46 3925

CABIN

NEW

BUILDING and carpentry

Flea Market on Saturdays

stone tars

hogging

Ch1ld care 1n my home
Refere nces reliable 992

MAN

furntfure

brush

Post hole doggong 742 2S77

steel
batteries and
radiators ginseng yellow
root catnip and sassafrasl
10 am to 6 pm dally Also
CAII675 5168

Homes for Sale

Sotuaflono Wanted

home 992 6022

L1ma

31

House w th a creage for
sale 3 or 4 bdrs fully car

per

bedrooms bath &amp; 112 new
carpel 1970 PMC 12x60

for nome $24 000 614 985
&lt;1395

SEMI

days

1972 Champoon 12x60 two
bedroom new carpet 1976
Cameron
12 x60
two

1980 14x70 Mobile Home 3

the ellglblloly I st at 992
2156 or 992 21S7
1nvalld needs help

1Ax6-4

two bedroom new carpet

bedrooms extra room Wtth
wOOd burner s tt ng on 2
acr es Good bu 1ld ng s1te

completely fur
home
mshed $3900 Call «6 0390

three

pet 1971 Cameron

In sured

and earn gOOd monev plus

MacKenz1e

Ohlo4S805

aluminum

serv1ce

Phone 304 576 2010

as a young bus• ness person

vacancy for room board
and care for elderly n my

Gold

Shrub

GET VALUABLE tralnong

Grade School buold ng
before clos ong
Write
Robert S
Voro
705
Dr1ove

WELL drilling both rotarv

etc

complete
households
Write M 0 Miller Rt 4
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760

P cfures

Deadlme for ap

.......t~

l!*t..._

On

on 1&lt;43 off Rl 7 bypass 992

U

conditioner, ,
'Ctlrtelna,
earner-. glrll clothillll
11... 3-14111C1iesllut1214,
r~a,
ttlpef, mile
GNIIIIIrllr
3 and
•hlllf miiM out lutllllll
RDIICI Watc:ll lor signs
Stilvr$y,t1114

stone fireplace

carpeted

Casttlers 1 stock clerks for
grocerv •tore Send resume TV service c~lfs Cali 992
fo IIDK 12+ C c o Dally Sen 6776 l&gt;r 992 203.t Also used
tlnel, PorMroy OhiO 45169
color TV tor sale

apreec~a.

I

2 story house with attached
single &amp; s cllr garage 1 h
baths 3 bedrooms large

Antique auction July 25 10
a m Main St Laurelville
Ohio o10 pieces of furniture
Millersburg &amp; Northwood
Carnival
Fenton Glass
Store 1ndian old clocks

on

11

'Air

Ptl PfHNnt, WV 25550

Homes for S•le

Neals Auction Hogsett,
WVA Rl 2 Every Sal 7 00
PM
(Consignments
taken) (Will buy furniture)
Lonnie Neal367 7101

moped, toolS tiC

VIII'IY DriYt

31

Public S•le
&amp; Auction

Yard Sale
Long St
Rutland
Monday
&amp;
Tuesday July 20 &amp; 21 Rain
or shine

Burdellei Addition
Friday July 1 , I 00 to ?
Rain or shine anllqu~
wicker basket books bitn

Acute Care Nursing Units

They'll Do It Every T1me

Yard Slle
2923 Maple Ave Point
Pleasant Rein or shine

Brewers St1versville-Por

!land Rd Turn at toot at
Stlversvllle Hill

FRIDAY and Saturday, 45
Burdette Addition
PI
Pl,asant, 9 ?

and

presslve, complete tlno
of wedding and an
niversary

t.res

utollty

-Passports
an

severa l

household otems CB radoo
Mllchell Rd

Cedar h s
c~~·~~ lots of

Care Unit
(primarily gerlatrlcst

- Portraits

Now

clothes

Nun~lng

PlACE
-and

YARD SALE Thurs Sat
10 5 Large assortment ol

Yard &amp; Patio Sales John
son Mobile Home Park up
per Rt 7 Sat 18th 9 loll &gt;

$24 000
Coot
bedroom
Has FA
'lbuitll·i"

Gigantic 4 Family Yard
Sale July 16 17 &amp; 18 8 30
till? 1 mile above Cheshire
Rl 7

baths

Si300000

bedrooms d ntnQ room
large uttllty room bath

Yard Sale

furniture and m sc 10 00
to 7 00

7 room 11 , story nome
w th a f r eplace front
porch and a re a r porch

BEATS
RENT
RECEIPTS - One floor
plan home woth 2

7

Low
1nt e rest
In
Rutland
Two story
home 4 bedrooms 2

sev~ral

·

LISTING

Racme
Lo -ve ly
two
story hom e Owner IS
wood crattsman and
woodwork IS exQUISite

Makes th•s 3 bedroom
new home JUSt a hftle
cooler on a hot day If
has
a
beautiful
fireplace carpet and
new range n k ifchen
Many more features in

lot 1978 Hollcrest 14x70
Has 3 bedrooms 1',
baths $12 000
NEAR POMEROY 3 bedroom
Car,pqrt

qU~Iified

lHE PHOtO

-

Terms $11 500
NICE MOBILE HOME

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
IS currently seek1ng
REGISTERED NURSES
for

Wold

your heat money and
put 1f on a vacat on L C
waer and small house

Hot W oll er tanh

nl.l Prop

and
Only

tu r k ey
deer
grouse
t1shtng
boat1ng and
swlmmtng near: Park
your camper and entOY
the Wild Tetms maybe

SiX'( il ll.tfe!o For
Cn nl .tu nll e
N

garage

$57 000
HUNTING

Call Ken Young

h e\

Very

ntce 3 bedroom
1''
bath 3 yrs old N1ce set
f1ng '" the country on l
acres Central a r and

l&lt; c plh i AdlorFulure Relrrence

•w

Fosh

boat and sw1m on the
Oh10 En10Y the sum
mer pnvate lot and 3
bedrooms
1 7 bath
mob1le home
n ex
cellent
condtt1on tor
only $13 500

Sues from 4x6 to 12x40

LEO MORRIS

Like

new
ranch
home
'"OVerlookmg the Oh10
R1ver
from
Katser
Alum 3 bedrooms 1' ?
baths 30 ft llv1ng rm

SMALL

- Annivers•rles

Trash Ptckup In
The VIllage Of

T

EAFORDm

10 7 tf c

- Weddings

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

'

1 (614) 997 3375

HOWARD
ROTAVATORS

Ren

SURROUNDED
BY
SHADE
TREES

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION

tenstve remodel
tng
• E lectnca I work
• R ool1ng work
13 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

Water Sewer Elecfnc
Gas Lme 01fChes
Wat er Lme Hook ups
Septtc Tanks
County Cerllf ed
Roush Lane
Cheshire Oh

Want Ad

Pomerov Oh

All Models Availabl e

949 1860

GET 't011a--Wl'l11A

991621Sor992 731•

HJ 50 - 20 30 H P
HA 60 -25 60 H P
HE 60 - 45 80 H P

Beaut tul Cu stom
Bullf Garages
Call lor free S1d ng
es t.mates 949 2801 or

NEW LISTING -

V C YOUNG II

S 1 1 tt c

V1nyl &amp; Alummum
SIDING

Offoce 742 200J
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr

Addons and
remodel tng
- Rooftng and gutter
work
- concrete work
- Ptumb1ng and
electncal work
(Free Estimates)

6 15 1 mo

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

of
Brandon
In
Meadowbrook Phone 304
675 3.&amp;42

''YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING
12

COMPLETE

1R tt

H1ul ng

Rates and Other I nformat10n

35 -

am1111011

Card ofT hanks

3

Female dOll 1 112 yrs Old
part beegle, also free puppits Call .c.46 4766 after
530

5 month old lrosh Seller

I t- Hom" lmpt'Ovlmenh
12-Piumb ng &amp; E•uvo~t ng

n Exuv11 ng
14-Eitc r til

992-2156

::..: .. : . ,~~

Free to good home 3 playful
kittens 62 Lincoln St after
530

pup answers fo the name

Call742 3195
or992 7680

lS Lots&amp; Acruge
l.-Ru Est• II! W•niHI
l7 Ru tOr\

GEl

Farm Ponds Land
Clearmg Roads
Call

7 4 It t

For a II of your wer
mg needs

on•

II Cf \

.:. ~.:.: : · :.~

CAT D-6-C

949 2160

MILLER ELECTRI
SERVICE

&amp; Grollo n
s,.d&amp;Felil e

The lzaac Walton Club will
have

In Mason County

e FARM SUPPLIES

"

No trespassing on Richards
&amp; Son Inc properl)l at
Letart Falls or Apple
Grove Ohio Vlolatqrs will
be prosecuted

The Daely Senttnei-Page-9

7

ANY PERSO!'I who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or aflempl to
Offer any other thing for
Mle may place en ad In this
column There will be no
charge to the advertiser

male Kalrn terrier t Call

In Meigs County

446-2342

DOZER WORK

l 7 1 ft c

n W•n eel to Buy
H T uckslo Sail!

eFINANCIAL

tn Callla County

GIYNWIY

4

ATTENTION LADIESiil
Help pay off thole un
wanted bills workl"g
evenings from 7 30 to 10 30
p. m as a fashion stylist
Earn S8 00 to SIO 00 per
hour profit
Ideal for
homemaker w i th family
Call992 3941 from 9 6

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

conrract
ex~
nses 10
the ter m s All
at the
purchase
relal1on to the pr nt ng and
CUSIP numbers on sa 1d
bond$ shall be patd tor bv
sa d boa rd of educa t on
prov 1ded however tha t th e
CUSIP serv ce charge for
a t anv the ass 1g nm en1 of sa 1d
ace
I be at the numbers sha ll be the
r e&lt;luest and e)(pense ot the respo n s b I ty of the pur
Paymen t for chase r
Th e b dS wtl be co n
must be made by
pur ch aser n Federal s dered and acted upon a t a
u nds or oth er
funds mcc t ng ot sa d board ot
.wa l ab te l o r 1mmed ate edu ca t1 on on the d"te of
c r cd t at M ddl eport Oh o sa le or w th n three (3 )
days fh ercCl fter
on th e date of deliver y
Upon appl ca t on torm
No c ond t anal b ds w 11
"'ny prospect ve b dder fo,be re ce ved
The approv 1nQ oo n1on at The bonds. sa d board ot

Ph 367 7S60

t'

&amp; LI~ESTOCK

II Wanted To Oo

33

l----

•Steel • Alum num
Castmg • Tra ler H t
ch es
•
Metal
Fabnca t ons

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

HOUII!s 0 Nen l

F=01rm Equ pmen

With Remittance

BARNEITS
WELD SHOP

Srdmg
Roofing 1 Gutter
R e model ng
~crv1nq You Are for
:.!0 Y c 1rs

51

17
18
19
10

The Datly Senttnel
Bo• 729

Sep

RENTALS
0

PublcS.f
&amp; Auc on

I

32

Matl Thts Coupqn

dated

tembf'f 1 I YH I numbered
fr om I to 200 nc us ve of
Th e denom na on of $5 uuo
bear nq nterest at the r a te
of ten a nd one ha f pe r cen
tum ( 10 ) per cent) per an
num
payable March
IJ82
a nd se m annually
th ereafter on th e lsi day of
Sep tember and March of
eac h year and matur ng
51 0 OUO on September I of
each yea tram 198l to '190
nclus ve
e xcept th a t
$ 10 000 ma tures n 990
A nyone de r ng to do so
may pr ese nt a b d o b ds
to s.a d bon ds ba sed upon
Th e r bear ng a d tt ercn t
ra te at ntcres t r am th a t
hC'fe nabov e
spe c f cd
pr ov ded thn l wher£' n fr .=tc
t10nnt n ter es rate s b d
suc h ri'l c on shat be one
c ghth at on e per centum or
n mu ll pic ther Pof
Bo h th e pr nc pa ot "nd
nter es l on the bond s 'l r c
PlY 1b c tom unl m t ed
taxes a t M dd le por t Oh o
w hout leduc 1 on to ~ y
cxchanqc co c ct on or ser
v cccha qc
Thf'SC bond s. Mf' SSUt (i
tor the purpose o c on
sTru c t on rcnova t ons. m
provom t: nls and add 1 o n ~
to sc hool bu ld nq s 1nd
prov d nq cqu pmf'nt I ur
n sh nqs and s tc devc op
menr under ou th or t y at
t he qeneral lnws at the
Stnl r at Oh o pn rl ru a r y
th&lt; Un form Bond L aw ot
th&lt;' Oh a Re v sed Code by
v rtu c ol !he rcQu s tc
m =t or t y vol e o thf" f" cc
or s of s r~ d schoo d s r c t
1t the e cc t on he don J une
2 IY8 1 nd our sunnt t o a
c so lut on o l ~it r1 t o it d ot
ducat on du y actopt ect o n
Ju y IJ IYHI
T hesc bon
v.. II be
'l Wordcct to lh f' b d df'
11 hos.c
~
th e

41
42

._ los •nd Found
1 'J'ollrdS41!

23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30

5

co~~ rdOf Thinks

II 14 Jl Jtc

Code

1
-

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
1

(I)

be

7 13 2mopd

Pr nl one word n each
spa ce be ow Each n
t a t or group ol I gures
count s as a word Cou nt
na me and address or
phon e num ber f used W&lt;ordsl
You I get b etter resu l s
t vou aes cr be fully
9 ve pr c e ThE' Sen f net
reserves th e r ght to ---+--~-~--1----l
c lass fy edt or re ect
any dd Your ~d w II be --+--1--~--+.--..:i
put
n
he
p roper
etas I c al on
t
vou I
check th e p oper box
be OW

4

OF BONDS
SEA L ED B DS w I

Ph

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

Jane Wagner ~
Treasurer Board
of Educat 1on
Me gs Loc al
S c hool
D1str cl

Business Services

P u'b-"llc--o
No-o-otooc-eNOTICE OF SAL E

or Wnte DallY Sentmel Classtlted Dept
Ill Court St Pomeroy 0 45769

Phon•·-----------------

endorsed
B 1D FOR
SCHOOL IMP ROVEME NT
BONDS

Deputy Cl~r k r---------------------~----------------------~----------------------L-------------------~

I 14 1 c

$

Gallia Co Aroa Cede
614
4-Galltpotls
367- Cheshlro
381-Vinton
z.I5--Rio Grande
J79-Walnut 01st
256--Guyan Dis!
643-Arabla Dlsl
Mason Co w va
Area Code 304
675-Pt Pleasant
458-Leon
576--Apple Grove
773--Mason
112- New Haven
895-Letart
937-Buffalo

A-ncements

McNabb Cermlcs new
classes
now
form ing
limited nuinber accepted
Sl)eeial beginners c1a11
beginning July 20th Class
llmlltd to I Call ~ ~
1716 Sharon McNabb Cer
tilled Duncan Instructor

following telephone exchanges ...

education Will turn1sh anv
matertal.ntormatton about
the school district and 1ts
t1nances wh1ch may be
r easonably requested. but
no oft c al statement of
s mllar document wtll be
prov ded
Bids should be sea led and

and

Wtlllams attorneys of C1n
ctn{lat
Ohio who have
prepared and supervtsed
the proceedtnO$ for the
bonds wtll be furnt 5hed to
fhe successfyl b1dder at
such bidders expense as a
term of sale The board of
educaf1on Wtll pay and
provtde tor the pr nt ng of
th e bonds wh1 ch w1ll have
prtnted thereon the text of
sa1d approv1ng op.n on
If
s aM1c pa ted that
CUS IP 1dent ftcat1on num
ben. Will be prtnted on sa 1d
bonds
but ne1 ther th e
fa1lu r e to pr nt such num
ber on anv bond nor any
arror w t h respec t thereto
shalt const 1tute ca use tor a
ta1lure or refusal by th e
purc h aser the r eof to accept
?'l.t!n_e ~tj delivery of and pay lor sa 1d
bonds 10 accordance w11h

S

1Cla~sified Pages cover the

Public Notice

Public Notice
Shafter

Peck

b(

PHONE 992-2156

Addre••·---------

2
3

Jowest net 1nterest cost to
NOTICE ON FILING
the board of educaflon net
OFIN~ENTOR'\'
nterest cost to be deter
AND APPRAISEMENT
m ned
deducting the
rhe State of Oh1o Me•g~ amount o any prem1um of
Coon'y Coor' ol Common tered from the aggregate
amount of .nterest payable
Plecu Probate 0 VISion
on the bonds from the date
To the Executor or Ad
of the 1Ssue as above
m nt strator of the estat e to stated
to the severlll
suc h ot the fo llow ng as '(ir e matur ty dates at the rate
res dents of th e State ot speetfled tn fhe b1d No btd
Oh10 v z
the sur v v ng for less than the papr val ue
spouses the next of k n th e of all the bonds offer ed
benef1c 1ar es under
th e hereby plus accrued 1n
w II and to the attor:ney or terest (WhiCh 1nterest shall
be computed on a 360 day
attorneys r epresent ng any bas sl
to the da te of
of the aforeme ntioned per
del very
w II be en
sons
terta ned and lhe fight IS
re!.erved to rep?&lt; t any and
N eva L Ba as I Case No
all b ds 1t each of two or
23473 ) Reedsv1 te Oh o
You are hereby nof1l cd more b 1ds produc es the
lowest net m terest cost the
tha i the Inventory and Ap
bonds may be awarded on
pr a semen! of the estate ot such one of satd b ds as s
rh e
a f orement o n ed
chosen by lot
dece ased late of sa1d Coun
Eac h b td must be ac
compan ed by cash a bank
ty w e r e f ed n th s Courr
cash te r s or ott c al scheck
Sad I nventory and Ap
pra sement w 11 be f or or a cert f1ed c heck not
henr ng before th s Court drawn upon or cert fed bv
the btdder or a ny combt
on th e .tl th day of A ugu st
nat on t hereof payable to
111 1:11 dt 30 o c toc k PM
rnc ord e r at sa td bOard at
A ny per son d es r nq to cducaf on n the am ount of
1 c
ex c!?pt ons ther e To one per cen tu m of the
must t e the m at c 1s t t vc amou nt o f bonds betng
ay s pro to the d ate set sold upon co nd1t on t hat il
the b d s accepted ..the
l or hertr no
tre asure r of sa d board of
G ven unde r m y hil nd educar on w II d€'1 ver the
1n t S f' ~ at s l d Cou t I s bon ds to the success ful b d
.&gt; h d a yo Ju y 19tl
der w th n th rty ( 30) days
he dt'lfe of award
Robu E Bu ck ot
o g~ her
w 1th the usua l
Judqc
papers
no
By Cn o yn G Tho rn ns de very

WANT AD INFORMATION

I
1

I

total

s $176 450 00

Nam•----------

wanrea
For Sa le
Announcement
For Rent •

The

protect cost 1nclud ng a
$76 4.50 00 grant from the
Econom c Deve opment
Adm1n strat on
u S
Department of Commerc e

Wr te you r own ad and order b y ma w th t h s
co upon Cance l your ad by phone when yo u get
resu ts Money not r ef undabl-e

l
)
)
)

Public Notice

near the center of down
town F'omeroy Oh10 The
build ng tn quest1on IS the
o ld Pomeroy H gh School
constructed 1n 1914 The
bu ld n~ s constructed of
red br ck and stone ts 3
stortes htgh and s tn the
English Revtval style of
arch tedure
The proposed amount of
Farmers
Home
Ad
mtn strat ton f1nanc1ng IS

$100 000 00

Pubhc Notice

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oheo

Large 2 story stone home
welllnsullaled woth Jlarge
bedrooms one full bath 2
112 baths formal dinong
room newly remodeled kof
chen buill tn including dish
washer

basement

se lf con

Ia ned Phone 304 675 3427
1967 Trailer for sale Phone

304 675 4898
2 bedroom mob1le home

10x45 Sl400 Phone 304 675
1452 or 675 2996
Nash 2 bedroom tra11er
pnc ed on tnspecf1on good
con dth on Phone 304 675

6273 or 675 3442
33

Farms tor =.
Sa:::l::oe__

55 acres n.ne room house
barn m nerals secluded
gOOd hunt ng Morn ng Star
area $65 000
Add1tlonal
101 acres avatlable 9of9

2630

with

work ShoP 2 car garage
with work shop large gar
den 2 porches 54 Grant
St
Middleport l59 500
wanting quick sale to settle
estate Call 614 384 3809 for
appointment (Alter IPMI

35 acre farm with barn
Elecfnc &amp; water Good
place tor new nome or
1ra11er s te
For
1n

format on Arnold Grate
Rutland
Days 742 2511
evemngs 742 22~

New 3 bedroom l'fome 2 l5
Lots &amp; AcrNge
baths large living room
dlntng room combination
Roughly l /2 acre S R 684
bUilt In k1tchen laundry Harr.s onvtlle
Ask no
room 2 garages fully car $3 500 742 2577
peted, farced a~r heating &amp;
air conditioning Comer
BY owner 3 apartment
lot 992 50112 8a m 1 p m
ShOWn bY appointment house on approx 1 acre
LIve on one rent others to
Middleport
make your payment Can
be conver1ed single home
7 room house and acreage City water will consider
Driving distance to mines land contract 675 1883 9 5
or Athens an 51 Rt 143 pm
Across
from
schbol
Buildings for bUSiness
145 ACRES 412 378 1804
possibilities 742 2239

- - -- - -

'- - - -- - -

�U

«

L,n &amp; ACI'Hp!

LOTS -· Real nice camPSI!e

on

Racceon

Creek,

all

available, 1300.
Down, owner will finance,
call after 3 p.m .• 2.56·6413.
utllltln

2 acres on Floyd· Ciark Rd .
close lo Rl . 160. $.1,000.
Phone ~ - 0390 .

Green Beans. Pick your
$6.00 bv . Raynor
Peach Orchard. 5 miles
below Gallipolis on Rl. 7.
Call ~ - 4807 .

Apartment

54

tor aont

Burrough ' s
L6000 .
Programmable Accounllng
Machine. Good cond. Call
(614) 4o16·2lol2.

2 bdr. apartment lg. LR
and K l tchen. Across from

Honda Shop no pets.
4&lt;16·3937 or 367·0.560.

Call

Second floor finished efficiency

apt .

Furnished.

adults only, no pelS. 729 2nd
Ave. Gallipolis. Ca ll 4&lt;16·
f!l!fl.

own

4 rent unfurn . apt. all car·

pe!ed, $250 mo. $100 dep,
uti I ities paid, no children,
no pets . Call ~ · 3437 .

2 lots for sale 16 Nei l Ave .."

S6,000, 38 Nei I Ave .• $.1,000.
Phone 388 ·8896 or 992-7042 .

For rent new 1 bdr . apt.

Callol-46·0390.
REGENCY APT . INC. 2

li entals

bedroom ,
chenfurnished,

kit ·
carpeted ,

bills partia ll y paid . $200
41

Houses for Rent

mo .

Clean 5 rm . house In
Eureka , full size basement,
fue l oil turnance. Call 256·

Exce ll ent

ne igh ·

bOrhOOd. 675-6722 or 675·
5104.

65&lt;17 .

Apartments. 675·5548 .

J bd r . house S250 . Referen ·
ces, sec. dep ., Rodney
Villiage II. Ca ll 446·4416 af ter 7PM .

SMALL furnished apart ·
ment, no pets, references
required , 304·675· 1365.

2 bdr . house L ower Rt. 7,
ref. and dep . required . No

4S

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING

ROOMS a nd

light housekeeping
Park Central Hotel

pets . Call2.56-141 3.
3 bdr . house in Point
P leasan t , wv . Basement
a nd porch . Call 675·5104 or

675-5386 .
5 rm . house on Chi ll icothe
Rd . P ho ne 446 -3437
Unfurnished
house
in
Pomero y . $125 a month ,
plus utilities and deposit.

apt.,

1977 26 ft Titan motor
h o m e . Generator , air
c ond ., awning, TV, an·
tenna , 6 ft . top carr ier,
sleep 6, 13,000 miles. Call

367-7300atter 5:30 .
Space for Rent

46

Ray' s Used Furniture
Maylag washer, S85 ea .•
drven S85 ea.. rollaway
bed $30, hospllal bed $100,
bool&lt;case $30, chest of
drawers $35, cotlee !able &amp;
2 end tables lo matc h $30,
blanket chest S85, wall
cab Inet $20, organ •tool $.15,
WOOd &amp; coal healers S65.
Open 10 tilt 6. Call367·0637.
Ladies .-: lathing size 10,
slacks, tops, and pants

suits. Sl.OO to S6.00, like
new. Ca ll 245-9314 alter
6 :00.

3 room furnished cotta ge,
utilities furnished, ad ults,
no pets . Phone 304·675· 2812

675-1371 or 675·3812
Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr trailer, turn .• gas
and wate r turn ., $225 . mo .,
$100 dep., no pets . Ca ll 446·

51

Household Goods

Sofa , cha i r , rocker. at·
t oman , 3 tables, S.SOO. Sofa,
cha ir and lovesea1. 1275.
Sofa s and chairs priced

from $275. lo S695. Tables.
$38 a nd up 10 $109. Hide·a -

2 bdr. tra i ler Roush Lane,
Cheshire, Oh . Phone 1·304

Lamps from $18 . to $65. 5
pc. dinettes from $79 ., to
$365 . 7 pc. . $189 . a nd up .
Wood table and 4 chairs,

Recliners.

S165 ..

$295 .•

$350 up to $495 . Hutches.

2 bdr . tr ailer turn ., gas and , $300 . and $375 ., maple or
water furn .. S225 mo., $100 p ine finish . Bedroom suites
dep Cal l 446 4225 or ~
Bassett Oak , $6 .. 9 .,
07.56
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk
bed complete with mat·
2 bdr . mobile home for t resses, $250. and up to
S350 . Capta in's beds, S275.
rent . Call 446· 1052 af ter 5.
compl ete. Baby bed s, $89 .
For rent. lOx 50 2 bedr oom Matt resses or box springs,
mobile home . Racine area . full or twin, SSS .. firm , $65 .

and $75. Queen sets, S185. 5

2 bedroom trail er for rent .
Brown's T rail er Park . 992 ·

3324.
2 bedroom Mobi le HOme in
Ra cine $175 . month, $75 .
deposit . Pay own utilities .

36H811
Two bedroom house trailer
on Ash ton -Upland Road .
SlSO plus utilities and
damage deposit. J mi les

trom Rt. 2. 675-4088 .
Two 2 bedroom house
trailer s for rent, furnished ,
1 with central air, good for
working couple or coupl e
with 1 chil d S150 per m onth

plus deposit . 67H088 .
2 bedroom mobile home at
App le Gro11e across from
Goodyear
Plant
S135
Ut i lities. d eposi t
and
r ef erence required . ~hone

30.-576·2479

d r. c hes ts, SA9 . • dr. chests,
s.. 2. Bed frames, S20.and
S25 .. 10 gun · Gun cabinets ,
SJSO .. dinette chairs $20.
and $25 . Tappan gas or
electric ranges , $285 .

USEO

Ran ges .

refrige r ators, and TV 's,
3 m i les out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri , 9am to5pn'l, Sat .

446·0322
GOOD
U SE D
AP
PL I ANCES
washers,
drvers,
refrigerators ,
rang e s.
Skaggs
Ap
pliances , 1918 E~stern

Ave .. 446 7398.

14 acres 01 pulp wood , ap·
prox . $8,000 value. Willa rd

Ellis. Rt. 1 Cheshire,Oh
Cail367-7634.
For Sale 77 Honda 554K
6 ,200 mi. and riding lawn

Antiques

ATTEN TION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or cer tified check
for ant iq ues and collec ·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,
gu n s, pocket watches, and
coi n col lec t ions. Call 614

767 3167 or 55J.34ll .

2 bedroom mobile home in
New Ha11en, adults only , no
pets. Phone 304·675·1452 or

675-m6
2 bedroom mobile home for

54

Misc. Merchandise

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER
V ICE , Complete sales, ser ·
vice . supplies and in ·
sta llation . 446· 1324.

rent. Phone 30H75-3885.
44

Most anything used in
Restaurant and store
equipment. RADCO 304·

Apartment
for Rent

523· 1378, Hunlington .

Furnished efficiency apt.
$135 uti lities pd ., share

balh. sui! able for one . Call
446-4416 after 7PM .
2bdr. unturn. apt., clean,
good location on Main St . ,

Specia l Sale! Satellite An·
tenna, BUY direct from
manfacturer,
180
TV

stati ons. call602-622-2290 .

Free estimates, reasonable

Phone 30H75-4172.s

0

Polar L TO com -

pound bow with eight
arrow quiver and bear
sights. $90. Call after S only

304-6751874 .

FUEL oil stove $75 . Phone
304-675·6581alter • p.m .
5,000 BTU air con ditioner
and a kitchen stool. Phone

Lowest prices on Bemco
bedding i n the area . Call
for pr ices . Villiage Fu r ·
niture, 2605 Jackson Ave .,

675-1773.

18,000 BT U air con ditioner,
excellen t condition, $300.

Phone 304-675-2820.

Supplies

Harness, co llars, bridles,
etc . for horses. Call 256·

Call245·5121 .

6042, Northup, OH .

For Sal e Bxl2 ft .
with wi ndow ,
within 25 miles.
Hannan Trace
6007 or 2.56·1.488.

Red Barn
delivered
S700. Call
FFA 256 ·

ldaco Numbt&gt;r 10 Drilling

S6

Rig good cond . Call
8508.

Ca l l Judy T ay l or at 367 ·

Pets for- Sale

POOOLE

Above ground pool COM·

PLETEL Y

INSTALLED

starting at sm.oo. Pr ice in·
eludes pool, deck , fence,
filter , liner. and 1n ·
stall ation under normal
ground condition. Free
shop at home service . Ca ll

1·800-62H511
Canning tomatoes. Andrew
Cross, Letart Fall s, Ohio.

AIR

CONDITIONERS

sa le priced , all sizes i n
stock, expert installation
available . Village Fur ·
niture, 2605 Jackson Ave .•

304-675-1773.
EASY cr edit avai labl e now
to purchase fu r niture ,
telev isions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605
Ja ckson Ave .. 675·1773
Dinnette se t , table 4 cha irs,
J lawn cha ir s, wheel
barrow, old fashioned
Kraut Cutter, 1 color TV , 23
inch Zenith , 1 rocking
chair. See Mrs. Betty
Newlun at Box 3, L ong Bot·
tom, Ohio .
Uti lity frai ler 4'x 7' . 247·

2092 .
1nternat ional

tilt

trail er .

Chow puppi es.
CF A
Himalayan, Persian and
Sia mese kittens. Call 446·

38.j.jafler 4 p .m .
HILLCREST

KENNEL

Boarding all br eeds , c lea n
indoor -outdoor faci I ities.
Also AKC Reg
Dober·
mans. Call446·7795 .

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon
se tt ers,
English Cocker Spaniels.

Ca ll446-4191.
THE FISH TANK and Pet
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.
675· 2063, Pt. Pleasant. New
hours. Now open on Wed.
Open 11 ·4 Mon . thru Sa t .
Fri . hours 11 ·6.

Da c h s hund .

Pomeranian

an

Poodle

pups 895 3958 .
Chow Chow pupies, ex·
cellent pedigree, black
cr eam and red, male and
fema le . Glenwood 304 ·762·

2035 .
Bea ut ifu l AKC Pekingese.
toy pood l es champion
bl oodline. tiny , tea c up
Pomeranians, shots, wor·
m ed and Pa r vo, very
reasonab le. Phone 304·743·

6·55 gallon drums. 247 ·2092.
equipment.
t re n c hers

used. recondit ioned R65
165HPR401 (40HP gas &amp;
diesel!. 30 (30 hp l. All with

backho e attachments
avai lable; J20 and smaller

units.

Dav

H43 9751.

evenings &amp; weekends 1·592·

Lodi apples, e)(C . tor sauce
&amp; eating . Fitzpatrick Or·
chards, St. Rt. 699 . Phone

669 -3785.
p.m .

Hrs.

10

a . m .· 7

26' TROUTWOOO trave l
trailer and camp site on
Raccon Creek. Close t o
Ohio R iver. • SSOO down .
Owner will finance. 61.4·256·

1216.

AKC fem ale miniature
Pomeranian $75. Phone

304-576-2927.
:=====:::::==c==o== ==
S7
Musical
Instruments
Wurlitzer
'funmaker'
organ . Casse tte player and
rhythm built· i n, exc. cond .

Ca ll 304-675 -5320 afte r 4:30
PM .

5685 .

Crawler
Loader,
(2)
Frank l in 170 Skidders, (2)
Prentice
GRM
Knuckleboom
Loaders .

Call

Don

Legg

in

Washington, West Virginia

at 304·863·3648 .
12HP, 2· wheel, Gravely, 40
in .
mower ,
26
in .
culitivator . Sears electric
week -wacker 16 in . cut .
sears drop spreader. All i n
exc . cond . Call-446 ·6575.
Four 15,000 gallon tank s
located above ground at

Athens, Ohio. $3,000 .00
eac h. Phone 1·304-422-2781.
1 good Case ba i ler and
wagon $2,500. 1 large pony
maine

Yam aha Acoustic Gu itar.
FG ·75. Like new. $125. Af·

te r5 :30 call (304l8823592.
sa

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

B EA NS ,

cabbage,

potatoes, squash, cucum·
bers, etc. Larry Sayre, 304·

895·3319.

and

stocking
3891.

tail,

white

legs. $300 . 985-

1977 Cub Cadet (New motor

Apt .
~- .j.l16

992·5908.

motor good. PDdy needs
work . $400. Call ~- 8508 .

owner . Call 388·9996.

77

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr . wrecker
service . "Big or small" we

low !hem all! 2332 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio. Oav
- 446-2445 or Nigh!
4464792.

Far Sale . 1975 Chevrolet
No11a, needs work . Priced

low . Call 446-0097 or
1964.

~·

Auto Painting &amp; sanding
$175, any color,f ree pickup

1977 Olds Starfire air cond.,
PS , PB, new radial tires,
new Diehard battery, and
new pa int. Priced to sell
Quick, small V·6 engine.

Call446· 1052.

1973 Nomad travel !railer .

extra clean, book $2,400.

Sell 1,395. (F irm ! 614·667·
3085.

hole diggers

2289 .

Ph0ne675- 1570.
1980 Rennaull Le Car 14.500

Pony stud service . For ap·

458·1006.

12

T,-ucks for Sale

1980

VW

HAY for sale or trade for

ca ttle, 304-458·1057 .
~

'

In sepllc lank. 675·1234.

$5,800 firm . Ca ll after 5 :30
PM 367 ·0694.

Larry

Slden·

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Ulllt&gt;ER-

5TANDj

~ "'tWl't II"

Fuller Electric Co. Com ·
plete rewiring/ commercial
or residential, and elec·
frical maintainance, also

on

call.

Ph .

by JHOM AS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Classificalion
I Demented
4 Give birth to 41 This is
not gross
8 Blessed the meek ...
DOWN
9 Envelope
I Mandrake's

446 ·2171,

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding. 30

service. Authorized Singer

style
forte
11 Be given
2 Betel pahn
12 Entertained
3 caution
13 Decorate,
4 Siegfried's
as a cake
slayer
14 Hoosier
5 Literary
hwnorist
collection
15 Wback
6 Hamlet
16 Desert convoy 1 " - Rigby"
18 Black cuckoo 9 Reward
19 Dolores
10 Look up to
- Rio
12 Glossy
2Q Borodin's
black
"Prince -" r:--r.--r..%1 Mountain
ash
24 CUbic meter
25 Fully

SEWING Machine repairs,
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen

Scissors . Fabric
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

Shop.

STUCCO PLASTERING

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·

textured ceilings, com·
mercial and residential,
free estimates. Call 256·

N. air condition service,
commercial, Industrial.

Phone 882· 2079.

For Sale 1972 GMC 7500

Clotus B. Buck Jr.· Home
SANDERS
CON - and Industrial Sewing
TRACTING, Carpentry Machine Repair. Also will
work &amp; painting, concrete, trade or sell Old or used
landscaping, «6-2787.
sewing machines. Phone
304-458-1659.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by 8S
General Hauling
Haffell Brothers Custom
DEPENDABLE
Carpels. Free esllmales. JIM' S
water delivery. Call 2.56C:all444-2107 .
9368 anvil me .

614-690842 .

~ - 3870 .

75 Chevrolet 112 T. V-B.
auto.,
new tires . 75
Chevrolet 1 T, 12 fl . stake
bed low milage. Call ~0322.

balanced
26 Andress tUJrl!:,-+-t-27 Noted
architect ·

..

~~~SH~:bl~s. Ca~~~~
swings, most wood produc·
ts. 101 Court Sl., Gallipolis.
Call4o16·2572.

Used R65 Ditc h Wllch lren ·
cher &amp; 1972 GMC 7500
series Tamden axel Diesel
Dump Truck. . I·~U·69A7842.

28 Atomizer,
NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways_
Call for estimates 367·7101

e.g.
32 Work wtit
33 Hurry off
34 Tlmorese
coin
ii5 Kentucky
city
37 Fairy queen
38 Wyoming

Jones Boys Water Service.

WEATHERALL CON CRETE · quallly and ser·
vice, call675-1582.

PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, • p'lutnblng,
1971 Inlernallonal pick up 4 roofing, some remOdeling.
speed, body fair condition, 20 yrS. exp. Caii:IU·9652.
engine very gooct condition,
S600. Phone 304·458·1~ .

Call367-7471 or 367-0591.
DILLARDS
WATER
OELIVERY SERVICE.
Call446-7404.
JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367-0591 .

I I [

110

I

In concrete
sidewalks ,
· pa
b!IMfYion!, . garage floors
and etc. !"ree esllmafes. 11
J:rs experltnclf. Call 367·

.. •. -~

1.
•

.

.
l

39 Taro root

~~fAJ~f tJ
-

DAILY

~

II

-

··scOttldale (

eel· ~rJvit. lin·lm, Phona

.,'

I ()

.

.'
(

'

NoW arrange the clroltd litters to
form the .UQ)rile answtlir. u aug·

gosted~tho--.

•.

I I I I J'
.

(An-tomorrow)

YACHT HAZING. SQUIRM

Antwer: What the bored houaewife waa becomlno-

.

LONGFELLOW

CRYPrO&lt;IUOTE8

.

v..l..-ctay·a j
: "'..~; . _,.,

how to work It :

ene letter aimply stands for another. In this aa~ple A. ta
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin&amp;le letten, •
apostrophes, the leneth and formation ·o f lhe wor-ds are all '
hi nts. Each day the tode l ett ers are different.

Prtnranawertrerw: "(
~: RAPID

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

AXYDLBAAXR

IRfFOB~
rr

.

1--+-++-+--t-

mountains

~ VINNET,

AI'ARTME;NTS
AN 'D
MOBILE HOMES67H130.

Yeslerday'o Auwer
17 MUBlim
%8 Alan Ladd
prayer call
fihn
:W Willow genus t9 Chinese
21 Rerun
Empire
22 Excess type
office
Z3 lnlluenttal 30 Dodge
Z4 Tatter
31 Automatm
26 Whirls,
:II CUt
B!l a top
off

i;,-+-+-

'192·5880.

'·

.JUST C/11£
VISIT, YOU

MOR~E~!_L~====~~~ ~e-~

BACKHOE and Septic tank

1182.

1977 AMC Hornet, 6
aula.• air cond., PS, 4
Stationwagon, 2· 5,
-==~~~:=;:;;::;::::;=
gas mileage, e~~~~~~~~ ,,.
cond., $2500. Call
73
Vans&amp;4W.D. ··
alter 6PM If no answer
68 Ford Bronco, 6 cyl., 3
~-0929 .
speed, ho 'rust, ~~ .lnpg,
*150. firm, runs good, 304-1979 4 cyl. 1:h~vy Monze 576·2919.
~
liB. Sllver·grey . A·u to., PS,
PB . 40,000 miles, $3,500. 75 · bocloe sportsman 'van
Call949-2184.
11253. p~ :19-1· 615-2185~ &gt;

1 bedroom ·. apartment.
Fully furniShed, air ·condl!loner, TV. Adults onl~.
992·~-

WE'LL ...
OKAY... BUT

&amp;t7H1V 50ME

~- 4200

Call388·9857 .

Phone 304-93].2266. Besl to

Straw for sale. call 446·
1542.

EDWARD'S Backhoe and

Quaillv Cooling and
Healing Service Call 388·
9698.

years experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling .

diesel

runs good / bed rusty, $350.

Hay &amp; Grain

THAT GIRL
COULPMAKE
A flJ!ll11NE
F'OR 607W OF
LIS ... IF IOHE'P
J'UST SLIM

Gallipolis.

Carpet Cleaning

dition. Phone 304-675-3476 .

Ca ll

64

Home
Improvements

2fl96 .

1972 Volkswagen A ·l con ·

Walters

call after 6 p.m.

Halfield Backhoe.

Service.

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Sme ltzer's
Sleamway. Call 614 - ~ -

197J Ford 1/2 T pickup,
Farms.

Excavating

Dozer Service. Specializing

84

miles. $4,.500. PhOne 304·

800 Hens 50 cents each .
Poultry

contractors Plum ·

t tF"I££5

Diesel dump truck. C·all 1·

CHICKENS for sale. Phone
304-675·1478.

week-

Call446·7230 .

engine, 40 MPG, ex. cond.,

nv's $75.00 each. Call 304·
675-2372 or 895·3952.

o. c.

bing, electrical, hea ing,
roof i ng, aluminum, vinyl
Siding, and home painting .

742-2903 .

~- 1157

S TANLEY STEEMER

,.=3:= ==;=
L;=
iv=e=s,;=o=c:;:k= ==

goats . 1 Billy S80.00, 2 nan·

J a. P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367 ·7853 .

$1500. Call

with aw ing &amp; port·a·pot.

1972 4-door Impala , 8 cy l.
fully equipped, 1 (Miner .

3 REGISTERED Nubian

Cor . Fourth and Pine

Gas, electric, and water.

81

truck

An' less sal
stew nex'
time, sis .'

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

16ft. Y ellowstone camper.

1978 Fold down Camper

75 Triumph TR7 4-speed
S2300. Phone 30~- 7)3.5351.

Standing timber, to acres
or more. Phone 614·634·

Heifers. Phone 61073 0087
or 30073-9664.

.

slricker. 675-5580.

304-882·2914 .

freshen ing Holstein
heif~rs for sale or trade tor
quality yearling Holstein

GASOUNE ALLEY

DOZER WORK Compare
our RATES. Phone 2.56·
1.560.

days and 245·5438 evening
&amp; weekends . Will rent for
fair. Larr y Miller-.

1975 Gold ouster, e.cellenl

tractor S3550. Farmall H
t ractor S650. Phone 576·2328

Fall

._,.

Ditcher work. Charles R .

condition, original paint,
radia l tires. new brakes
and shocks, completely
tuned up and front end
aligned, 21 mpg, aluminum
rims include d $1,900. Phone

$250. 135 Massey Ferguson

poinlment phone 992 3904 .

building ,

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.fi~attielo~.

$6,100.00 Call304-675·5090.

1978 Chevette, very good
running condition. Phone

'-~2'---_~
W~•~n~l:..
ed=--c
lo=
B:..uy
,__

R

and

nice. 247 2092.

Henderson , WV . Phone 615·

304-675-1842 after 5.

post

T

remodeling, also papering,
carpet installation, and
genera l
home
im ·
provements. 675·5689, 615·

83

1980 200SX Datsun , ex ·
cellent condition, loaded,

247-2fl92 .

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump r e moval . 675·1331.

2803.

Farma ll cub tractor with
cu ltivators. Has new clut·
ch, pressure plate, throw
out bearing, transmission
over hauled,
~to
overhauled , new starter,
new
battery ,
battery
ca bles , new voltage relay ,

7' double disk (drag tvpel .

Phone 675-2250.

675-3376 or 675·1240.

157 4 or 675-2881.

runs good . 2&lt;7 ·2fl92.

ALLEY UKE THA.TI

Ser ·
WV

23ft . $2,600. Furnice &amp; ai r,
tub, shower. exc . cond . 992·

2092.

75 vw Rabbi! very good
cond ., $2,000. Call245·5077.

t bedroom apt ., very nice,
orlvate porch , large yard .

Camping
Equipment

City, OH .

dr .• all extras. good cond ..

t FEiiL ,_BLY GUILTY
eotNG OW ANI&gt; LEAVING

Phone 446-3888 or ~ - «77

tully self contained, ex.
cond. Call 256·6626, Crown

1971 Ford . Dump Truck.
Good cond. 13,200. Roy
&lt;Frankl Riffle. 985·4395.

6,000 BTU Westinghouse
air cond., hosp. bed with
motor, 21' RCA color TV,
babybed, gla•s lined elec.
holwater heater. canning
fruit jars. Phone 614·4&lt;16·
0595 .

Georges Creek Rd.

1980 Prowler camper 17ft.,

1976 M ercury Marqui s 4

house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446· 2454.

82

78

69 Nova 307 c i, Railey
Wheels, good cond .. $500.
Phone446-8061 or~ - 3549 .

RON'S Television service.
Specializing in Zenith .and
Motorola , Quazar, and

Shop, 221 Mill Sl. 379·2782.

~ · 9304

va lue $3,600 . Call 4461136
9AMtoBPM.

p.m . 675·5868.

5304.

your car looking new? Call

loan

CONF~T HI M~~!3J

mower repa i r and shar·
pening service, 10 a .m .-6

&amp; delivery in Gallipolis
area,
Hammond Body

E &amp; V Body Shop Want

77 Tran s AM near

~ I NDOI'I ··

estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR . 614-698·8205 .

COOK'S Television
vice ,
Henders on ,

Auto Repair

17' truc k camper top. Very

........ ........ ..

after

Apartment for rent. Call

1969 FORD L TO , aulo., 429
eng .• 62.000 actual miles.
PS, PB, air . Runs good, one

MORRISON'S Aula sa les.

-

$220.

1 bedroom apts. available
a! Riverside Apls . Equal
Opportunl!y Housing . Call
992·7721.

1972 3/4 T Ford pickup,

B' ca mper lop. 24].2092 .

~=========:...J.:::::::::::::::::::.f,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;
....... _ ...... , ..

utilities paid, adults, 1 bdr,

nice. Call
7PM.

TOPPER for pick up truck,
3'8" high, removable back,
full door. goOd cond.,
$150.00. CaLL «6·4225.

Dodge Monaco Broughm
stationwagon, 9 passenger,

FOO'ID THIS PERGO'l
C\JTGIDE AT il!E

HARPER Halstead, lawn

1978 CUTLASS Salon. 675
2122 or 675-5571.

Vinton. Oh . sec . dep. Call
245·5818 .
F urnished

batteries. 446·7717.

1972 Chevv 112 T, 3 spd .•
good cond. , $345. 1965 In·
lernoliona l. 3 spd. 112 T.
good cond., 6 cyl., U25. 1974

installed last year) . 44"
mower ,
10"
plow ,
cultivators,«" push blade,
double disk , set of hillers,
small uti l ity trailer . 246·

or 576·2606 .

8002 .

Construction
Di tc h· Wit c h

Farm Equipment

NEW
AKC

Auto parts, auto repair,
wre cke,- service, buy
automobiles, radiators and

positive traction rear end,

(52 in .) bav with black
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY - KENNEL, AKC

tering, custom made for
your home . For free

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

$875 . 1974 Ford 112 T
pickup. S625. Ca ll367 -0149 .

GROO MIN G.

7220.
SWIMMING
POOLS :
PRE · SEASO N SALE :
$999.00 INSTAL LE D!!!

CONTINIOUS no leak gut-

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

PS . AC. In-dash !ape.
$.1,000. Call ~- 8049 after
3 :30.

FOR SALE · EQUIPMENT
(2) John Deere 540 Skld - 1976 Ca pri , make offer . Call
ders. ( 1) John Deere 350 446·1246.

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win ·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Wi nters, Rio Grande, 0 .

~-

1978 CAMARO, silver with

61

Building

76

black Interior, 305 cu. in,

Clark cycles go cart . Phone
675· 1874.

un it.

For sa le Whir lpool dish
washer . Ca l l 398·9023, Bid·
wel l. OH .

Green beans, pick your
own $6 .00 bu . Raynor
Peach Orchard, 5 miles
below Gallipolis on Rt. 7.

Phone 304-675-6774 or 675·
2194.

55

592 -.5685

~ - 9«2 .

Roper 8 hp rotary mower in
good working condition.

with backhoe anachments
available ; J20 and smaller
evenings and weekends 1·

Call

446·4807 .

$115 . Cai i 30A-675· 1374.

1·443 · 9751.

&amp;
Vegelables
Homegrown-sweet corn,
cabbage, mangos, etc .
Charles McK ea n Farm .

304-675-1951.

HP ). R40 (40 HP, gas
diesel ). V-30 (30 HP l . all
Ca ll

Fruits

61.1T Yell~ AG 'rOO. ARE CLEARLY
INTERESTED IH MR. I'IARJl()&lt;!KG'
AFFAIR!!; VWL0 IT NOT BE MOR~ .
GI\T15FWI6 IF 'rOO WEltE TO

Autos for Sale

71

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

mower. Ca ll ~ - 1802 .

24].2092 .
53

BRICK , BLOCK, A.ND
STONE WORK . Call 2566735.

75 Honda 550 super sport,
excellent condlllon S900. Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
Phone 304-895·3954 .
deep stream exlracllon.

Smith and Wesson model
29, .U magum 8 inch barrel ,
presentation case. $3.50 .

Ditch Wench Trencher
used. rec onditioned R65 (65

beds,SJ•o., queen size, $380.

\&gt;92 5858 .

2605 Jackson Avenue, 6751773.

992 7479.

4745 .

773·5881 .

carry at Village Furniture

---------

Metebandlse

HONDA CB 360T 1976$600.
Motorcycle. Phone 304·n3·
5425 after 1 weekdays
anvil me on weekends.

BIG discounts for cash and

MUST !&gt;acr iti ce 6 p iece
li11ing room suite s..OIL
complete queen size bed

TRA I L E R space f or rent
Gr ee r Rd ., sewer and
r availab le, 304·836·
between 9 B. 11

1973 Honda uo. Good cond .
949-2.535 afler 5:00.

purchase .

7824.

LAYNE'S FURN IT URE
41

quanlty

ex

Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave. 675·1n3.

Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Ca ll

or 304-675·1580.
TWO bedroom house 304·

1980 Honda
500 custom,
like new. Call ~-9595 .

tor s.IOO. Call61&lt;-2.56· 1216.

Refrigerator, $50 . Ca ll 367 ·

4: 30, 992 29 18.

NEED several items of fur ·
nllure ,
appliances,
televisions. Big discounts

SPM.

Interior and Exterior pain·
ling, trailer roots, 1nd dry
wall 118 and up, 15 yrs: ex·
perlence . Free esl. Call4ol61.562.

.LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential. automollve.
Emergency service. Call
882·2079.

COUNTRY MOBI LE Hom e

2 bedroom
house
in
Pomeroy . Equipped kit ·
chen and remodeled bath
with shower Ca ll after

$350. Phone ~- 7747 after

for

Hom•

fu rnance for gas·oil or elec·
tric, and also works on hot
water heat. Sti ll in factory
carton . Would normally
cost around $1000, will sell

1 bedroom furnish ed house

TRA I LER space 3 miles
trom town iunction 2 &amp; 62 at
I
Y , Pt. Pleasant, 675·

1980 Honda NC 50 express.

sears Kenmore Portable
Good cond .

q

Improvements

WOOO BURNING add·on

Wedding dress size 12. exc .

cond., $140. 20' B/ W TV .
$50. Call 446·8554.

992-75 11.

3 ~d r oom, a .c., fireplace
Ru tl and area . S250 pus
deposit . 992 2013 .

if

Motorcycles

dl•hwasher .
992· 3242.

BEAR

FirewOOd tor sa le. Call 256 ·
6574 .

TRAILER spaces for rent .
Sout hern Valley Mobile
Home Park , Cheshire, Oh .

74

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

1978 Kawasaki L TO 1,0000, rales. scothguard, 992-6309.
$2,000. Excellent condition.
Phone 304-675·5079.
RINGLE'S
SERVICE:
c omplete
building,
1980 Yahama 650 special remodeling, repairing,
black a nd gold. low large or small jobs done efmileage, runs good. Phone flclenlly. Phone 675·2088 or
675·4560.
.
304-773·5096.

Tra iler space tor rent for
older couple. Ca ll «6· 1052
after 5.

on Ohio River south of Mid ·
dleport . 2 chil dren. no pets.
Refe r ences &amp; deposit
requ ired . Must keep yard
maintained . $150. month,
$1.50 deposit . 61•·837· 3614.

MISc. Merc....,dl ..

Misc. Merchandise

17,1981

Ohio

idd

·•· ''STI"'' 'CRAZY '.

LBTOFG

GXVRLGM .

LBTOFGXWV

MSC . -

QSB

IXGQFBU

MS C

HFSHGF
T.

TBF
LS

WSL
NFF ~

HFLFBNSW ,

Yetterdaly's Cr7Jt10ituok:THE RACE WILL BE TO

THEM .

THAT DO NOT !\UN IN CIRCLES,- ROIJEitTH. MIU.ER

�..
'.J

Reagan•.

1

Area·deaths
Vansessa Chavez

Leonard Hess
Leonard (Boo) Hess, 66, 100 State
·St., Pomeroy, died Thursday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Hess was preceded in death by
his parents, Leonard and Mina
Mayer Hess.
Mr. Hess was the owner and
operator of the Century Bar for 29
years.
He is survived by his wife, Evelyn
Cook Hess; one sister, Mrs. Arthur
I Beatrice) Price, Pomeroy; sister·
if}-!aw a nd brother-if}-law, Mr. and
Mrs. George Waller, Lancaster; one
niece, Georgeanne Drake, Lancaster; two great nieces and several
cousins .
Funeral services will be held Monday at I p.m . at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev . William Middleswarth officiating. Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home after 7
p.m. this evening.

Charles Gibbs
Charles R Gibbs, 76, Hartford,
died Thursday in Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Bom Sept. 28, 1904, in Hartford, he
was the son of the late Ervin and Annie Gibbs.
He was a retired coal miner.
He was procdeded in death by his
wife, Sadie Louise Gibbs, in 1968,
and three sons, John Leslie, Cecil
Joe and Charles Ernest Gibbs.
Surviving are five sons, Thomas
B. and Hubert W. Gibbs of New
Haven. Denver D., Gary G. and
Garland 0 . G1bbs, of Hartford ; four
daughters . Mrs. Kathryn F . Warth.
Mrs . Virginia M. Patterson and Mrs .
Brenda A. Warth, all of Hartford,
and Mrs . Donna R. Neece, Middleport ; five brothers. Harold and
Ralph Gibbs, Hartford , Clifford Gitr
bs. Louisv ille, Ky., James and Jolm
G1bbs, San Francisco, Calif.; two
sisters, Mrs. Ivy Ingels a nd Mrs .
Magg ie Nitz, both of Pomeroy; 34
gra ndchildren a nd 16 great grandchildren .
Funeral serv1ces will be at I p.m.
Saturday at the Church of Chr ist in
Christia n Union , Hartford, with the
Rev . Earl Oiler officiating. Burial
will follow in the Union Cemetery.
The body will lie 1n state one hour

Meigs County happenings.

o

Marriage licenses

Emergency runs

Marriage licenses were issued to
Kevin Hugh Hudson , 19, Minersville,
and Kimberly Ann Mulford, 17.
Pomeroy; Dwight Patrick Medley .
22, Parkersburg, and Joyce Marlene
Bing, 26 . Syracuse; Michael Troy
Griffith . 20, Pomeroy, and Argela
Irene Kennedy, l7, Pomeroy.

The Middleport Emerge ncy Squad
at 10 :23 p.m. Thursday night took
Dottie Summers from Middleport to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 3:41
p.m., Thursday, the Pomeroy Unit
took Chris Triplett, Pomeroy , to
Veterans Memonal

Jones in hospital

Velt"rans Memorial

Beulah Jones , Middleport. is a
patient at IJniversity Hosoital,
Colwnbus Her room nunnber 1s 785
for those who wish to send cards.

Admitted-Robert Rinehart, M1d·
dlcport ; Trenton Qualls, Pomeroy;
Theima Eblin, Pomeroy .

(COnUnued fnlm page I)

By~ GJWIMEIER '

'

•
•
remarns
senous

vot. 15 No. 24
Copyrighted 19'1

MASON - A 31-year-old Mason
man remains in serious condition in
the intensive care unit of St. Mary's
Hospital in Huntington following a
swimming accident near Gallipolis
Ferry Wednesday evening.
Joseph Roush apparently dived
into shallow water In an abandoned
strip mine pit and struck his head
on the bottom. He was transported
to Holzer Medical Center by the
Point Pleasant Emergency Medical
Serivce and was then transferred to
St. Mary's.
Roush suffered neck injuries in
the accident and was held in
traction while he was transported,
according to a EMS spokesperson.

Thirty defendants were fined and
eight others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday .
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Leland Frame, Belpre, $10 and
costs, left of center; Charles Withee,
Pomeroy, and Douglas Bloomer,
Gallipolis, $23 and costs each,
speed; David Smith, Portland , $25
and costs, littering; Edward
Chaney, Minersville, and Mark
Markham, Pomeroy. $22 and costs
each, speed ; Terry J . Harmon ,
Kerr, and Samuel Pi ckens ,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs each, failed
to display valid registration ; Bobby
J. J olmson, Jr., Reedsville, $5 and
costs, unsafe vehicle; W. Rex Biggs ,
Pomeroy, restitution and costs, ins ufficient funds; Melinda Demosky,
Middleport, and Larry McCloud,
Marietta, $20 and costs each, speed;
Carroll Jonas, Jr., Utile Hocking,
Larry Longenette, Pomeroy, and
Lynn Brown, Pomeroy, $21 and costs
each, speed; Robert Seelig, Rutland,
$20 and costs, speed; David Stevens,
Colunnbus, $25 and costs, set, use
and maintain bank or set lines in
Forked Run Lake that were not
tagged with name and address;
Joseph Smith, Beckley, $25 and
costs, tittering ; Gerald Howard,
Albany, $10 and costs, failed to yield
one-half of roadway; Raymond
Thomas Letart W V
$21
d

Eclipse very visible
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The
heavens' biggest cheese, from the
vantage point of Earth, was eaten
away for several hours early today .
Most Americans had a good chan·
ce of viewing the partial eclipse of
the moon that began at 11 :25 p.m .
EDT Thursday and lasted until after
2 a.m. today, the National Weather
Service here said.
o Viewing conditions appeared "to
have been pretty good in the Northeast, the southern third of the
country, along the Pacific Coast and
in the northern Plains," the weather
service said .
·'Thunderstorms in central seclions, the desert Southwest and the
south Atlantic region would have impaired viewing in those areas."
A lunar eclipse occurs when the
Earth casts a shadow on the moon .
This eclipse removed from view adtut S5 percent of the moon's s urface.
Although Jess conunon than a
1
1·
·1
I
I.
soar
ec
Ipse,
unar
ec
1pses
sb
will
number 28 before the end of theI cef}tury .

MODERN SUPPLY
Jt9 w. Main
992-2164
Pomeroy, Oh .
THE STORE WITH "A LL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR
PETS. STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS
AND GARDENS

ELBERFELDS JULY CLEARANCE
CONTINUES
-·
WITH MORE REDUCTIONS

costs, speed ; Steve Blackwell,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, improper
passing; Larry Eakins, Racine, $25
and costs, defective brakes; Jimmie
Jolmson, Racine, $15 and costs,
failed to display valid license plate;
Bruce Hysell, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs, failed to display valid
rebistration decal; William Thomas,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, five days
confinement suspended, six months
probation, no operator's license or
motorcycle endorsement; Eddie
Nelson, Pomeroy, $200 and costs,
three days confinement, license
suspended for 30 days, DWI;
Thomas Roush, Middleport, $75 an!!
costs, six months probation, five
days confinement suspended, no
motorcycle endorsement, $35 and
costs, disobeyed stop sign; Robert
V. Wise, Gallipolis, $75 and costs, six
months probation, five days confinement suspended, no valid

driver's license, $200 and costs,
three days corifinement, DWI;
Luther Blevins, Pomeroy, $250 and
costs, 10 days corifinemenl, driver's
license suspended for six months,
OWl, $125 and costs, 10 days cof}flnement, no driver's license;
Michael Capehart, Racine, pay $40 a
week support, one year probation, 20
days corifinement suspended, nonsupport.
Forfeiting bonds were Steven
Nease, Minersville, $35.50, improper
tum ; Earl Neal, Gallipolis, $35.50,
failed to display a valid registration;
Donald Poole, Pomeroy, $35.50,
assured clear distance, $40.50,
speed; Russell Crabtree, Huntington, $35.50, assured clear distance; Kenneth Ferrer, Marietta,
$40.50, speed; Philip Fisher, Racine,
Carl Stewart, Pomeroy; and Mary
Stewart, Glouster, $37.55 each,
disorderly conduct.

'\

.,

'·'

~-

borhoods.
According to Bill Hartis, of Cole-Layer-Trumble Co.,
the Dayton-based finn that has been reappraising

Union leaders express. outrage,
postal strike deadline nears
.

UNVEUJNG - A moau~l honoring C. W. (Bill)
Hujobard, IOIUider ol .the Syrat~~se Little League .tourIIIUllenl, waa UJIVeiled Friday night iii Syracuse
MUDieipal Park by (from left) Fire ,Chief ~ne Jm. '·

.,

..

.

-l

....

l

·•., • . ..

·
''·
·
sYRACUSE -- An- attractive dedh:ation and efforts towards
montl'me'nl · designating
King athletic activities in Syracuse and
ba!eb&amp;IF iieid at ·the Syracuse southeastern Ohio. · ·
Mun'icipal Park was unveiled ·Friday . · Hubbard, a longtime resident of
everuilg' tiefore the start of second Syracuse, was in c~rge of the fort®Jd games of the amual Syracuse mer Kyger Creek Uttle League
todrium1erit for area Little T9llfllllJT1imt for some 18 years and
~guers .'
l)as abO been tournament manager
'J.."'!; monuffient provided tiy'4 the ' (){ the S)TaCIISt Ll. tow:nament sif}~~~ volun~r Fire · .ne~rt- ce :it sue~ the orte lit Kyger
· T1lt,' ~as ~red'ed in aP,PrecoaUon to Creek.
. .
•
,"1;1111",' Hf1bbard f~ · his
U!'vj!iling the mon'!"lent Friday
1
... .· ... ,l ,.;·'·,., , T"· • ;,
',
.1
!'.t·
• • • ,,
.

.

·

, c... 'W,•

ASSOCIATED PRESS

obtained by 12:01 a .m . EDT Tuesday
And Staff Repor111
when the current contract expires .
WASHINGTON - Leaders of two The unions have a "no contract, no
large · unions expressed outrage . work" policy, but the labor leaders
Saturday over a Postal SerVice have expressed a willingness to talk
demandthatworkersacceptatbree:. pastthedeadlineifprogressisbeing

'

''

'. ~ • •. •r- I , _. ;&lt;Mq ... ~ . I I&lt; \

r.;:~~rec:·:ro:t~~~~ ~:·h

liDf

'

•i ' '"-. ~ ' ~~ ·: ',

~- ~ . ~ i&gt;&lt;~ · companbWty,
~tb . ~et:S·Iil.~te \ndlislrY. It,

clt,..ster siltce Vie . ~e ·~ f~! -with : the

aV~J~c.i

WOi'lt

o 1·

clUb.

or-. ....($ee.l'elatedatory.~.QII ~-t.!!•;ii!:r:~.=.~~

· .. . .

.' "

i

·' · '·• d

'

' ,.

,.

·.

, -:~,EXteft
1 '

-· ·

I

'

~

..;,;,
'

'

• .

!!'ill,._,

-

,-

·

.

1bi
~~ .

'

.I.L':...

:WO W"'~J"
l

·

'~

'-: Ol!ltil!ltli:.tt-.lrlll'lll ~-- .
4~
W~••illr .~~..,..~~
_.

· =Ja=t;;~. ~

::JiliN•=... :..·=
.. -ill!:

. •

,,

!

RNa·
,"v. '
_

. '.'

·~ "

,

Gr\1J

tb:fl~ WiJIWVP. itP.f~ to

·the

R~- ~ ~

~--·· 1

...,111 . 1 '

Qe

a)-'

ft~,.~·~
...

I

.

· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · •· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

A·"

'
~.;~" • " . , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • •;,_ &lt;2-17

Awn
~·-ner ' ..,_..,.. , ••••• • •••••••••••• , •••••• , ••••• , •••• , • ...,..
Wllter 1!. ~· ~\f=I!MIIo·~nn' : EdltGrial •• ••••• , .• , ; •••••.••.••••..•........• , •• A·W·
crlticillll ~·· ••·•
tblt hthe •
·

· ..LU
:a:-tYI... , ................................... . .... S:W
li7it~ 1ht~ta~a~e ·~~ · u.:.!
.e ..................................... 7.. ~ .
. . J~~YLI• ...·' II·\-.
..
._..
....
·~
.LQeal
.•••
· ~ ·~
c a
.--r..,., ...' ••:. . '. ' ••..••••• '.' ' •••••••••• ' ' •.••••• Al.o58,

1111
1 7.1'..:;.\~
re"·
· · ;..,Witb·~~

58!
-~ ·

~..!ntJetter~~--

'· .....,..._
,, ~·~ ,t:.••r...n .

~, ...,_., ~&lt;

·

.'

1 -if ~.'J- -

• •

~d
.,

~..........,
WVYN"""'
A · dea.oL..
11ne ~ to t11e pri~ . &lt;tl ~ rea
...
.

..... . . - T

~ ottbe~--~JM!ORie.obtllefQurw

. '

QL!··

.' ~~ .
• ·

-~.

i

Jnsz e totJa·y. . . . .·-

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;=::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:::

==::';'"' ""''"""Ind
. _._.u • .i..o ". ··

n

•• ,, •

LOCATION:· 525 No 2nd ST. in .M.IDDLEPORT

single

~-

u.e·floor~theHyatt~IIIQ"Hotel fieiiluaidtliereuonforti)IwcoJlaR-· ,0.2)'. , 'f' ·
1 • ·,. .
ldllid 111 people - moreAmericans ' tl8 not Julo,m, bUt dcltlens of. · Offlelal8 Aldti)ly hlclno eitimlte

·:~

1".

+

r

than

every six months.
The unions announced 10 days ago
they were demanding a 5 percent
pay raise for each of the next three
years, a 2.7 percent immediate 'tftlciJ..up" increase aimed at keeping
pace with inflation, and a new cOlltof-Jiving fonnula that would gi-le
workers a penny-af}-hour raise : f&lt;)r
each .25 increase in the Consumer.
Price Index. They are also askl!lg
for a 35-hour work week and an · additional holiday.
A typical postal worker now eBI'ns
$23.300 a year, includillf! benefits: · :
The Postal Service has maiotained that the demands by ihe tiro
large unions would cost the ag~
$20.5 billion over the next tliree
years and force the price of a ft:ri3-class stamp up to 4~ cents by 1984: :
The unions' leaders asserted fh&amp;t
their wage demands would hold: litContinued on A-4
:

Biller and Sombrotto
·
, ·
' of disaster" . by heightening the charged at a joint news conference
was Syracuse Fire Chief Gene Imchances Of a strike.
' that Postmaster General William F.
baden, Clyde Triplett, son-in-law of
Moe -8111er, president or the Bolger is refusing to negotiate in
Hubbard and . also a f,i reman and
American Postal Workers Union, good faith and is thus trying to
Syracuse Mayor Eber Pickens.
and ViiiC!ent Sombrotto, head of the , provoke 8 strike, which would be
Mayor · Pickens also announced
Nailonal . AsSOciation ·of Letter illegal.
!hat in. the future, the annual LL
Carriei'S\ said the unions and the .
The union officials said the Postal
tOI!J1llllliCnt at Syra~ will be · P.oatal'Semce ll!lven't agreed on a Service is insisting that its workers
namedlnhonorofHobbard.
single iaalle, even though the two accept a three-year wage freeze,
. Hubbard was unable to attend the
stiles face· a 'Mond8y night strike reductions in managemenl's COl}unveil~ because of illness. He is deadline frir settling on a new con- tribution to health insurance
preaenUy . a patient at Pleasant
tract.
.
premiwns and retention of the
Vall!!Y•Hospitat
The Postal Servoce argued, . existing cost-of-living allowance
•
•
,.
· how~ver, that the wage freeze was
which would place a cap on s.uch
.;,~i...;1' ~~·
rt!Qillred under ptoylil~ of the·, !llsesof48centsanhour,hallofttto
be added to workers· paycheckS

ll
·
·
'
·
,
.·w~way··.· crJ a~se - cause-wUUiown.;·!..eae;:~ti~d~~:·
&lt; · ~·J· ,.i',

.,

OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8:00 P.M.

baden; .Clyde . Triplett, Hubbard's •-ln'law; . aud
Mayor Eber Pickens. Tbe monument was provided for
by tbe village fire department. Pickens saki tbe lOW'
namenl would named in honor of Hubbard in tbe
future.

·
·
.a
l h'
H bb d
·S yracuse o,J icia s 'O nor u . a~

~&amp;!ant walkwan !hat~.,..~ (It ~~I'D··

1

·

Additionally, Treasurer Mills said Friday that
payment of mobile home taxes were coming in even
slower than the personal property taxes.
Mills said he was fairly sure that 1nost landowners would pay their taxes bef.ore the deadline.
First-hall property tax collections were slightly
Jess, but if}-line with projections.
As a result of the expected run on the treasurer's
office from now until the end of ·July, Mills said he
would prefer that taxpayers mail their payments.
"We'll take the money anyway we can get it, of
course," Mills said, "but we would prefer that the

rI•

.

payments be mailed."
Given the existing and continuing financial
problem plaguing county operations, it is something
of an understatement to say that many Galla of.
ficials are concerned with the rate at which taxes
are being paid .
In fact, as the tax boOks opened at the beginning
of July, Gallia County was operating with deficit
spending of $23,000. A healthy second-half tax
coUection is considered essential for the continuation of full county services through the end of
this year.
Even with a full July collection, however, certain
county services are coming close to depleting their
1981 appropriations.
The sheriff's department, for example, is ex·
peeled to run out of appropriated funds by the first
of October. The airport authority has $203.06 left to
fund operations through the end of the year-the
dillaster services agency is in a similar financial
situation.
County Auditor Dorothy Condee said Friday that
there was no way supplemental appropriations
could be granted litis year to continue the
operations of any department that depletes its appropriation. Condee explained that supplementals
could legally be granted only when there are nof}appropriated funds available. According to Condee,
no such funds exist this year .
County authorities a re now estimating that under
the best of conditions, Gallia County may enter
calender year !982 with a $17,000 balance in all funds . A carry.&lt;Jver balance of between $300,000 and
$500,000 is considered necessary to maintain gover·
runent operations until the tax books open for first·
half collections early in the year.

•2

• \.

.

difference Gallia County residents will see refl«:eted on
their tax statements received In January 1982 will be
due to the reappraised values of their property .
Because state lnw requires reappraisals to reflect
the change in true market values, recent sales of
properties are the primary yardsticks used by ap.
praisers In detennining new values.
Therefore, even if a home has not been on the market
formany years, ita new value probably will reflect the
recent sale prices of similar homes in similar neigh-

fruit fly maggots now totals 175
square miles and includes most of
the San Francisco Bay Pennlnsula,
where an estimated 750,000 people
make •their homes. The latest area
targeted for spraying is north ·ot
Palo Alto, near San Francisco.

. "

Gallia property values since March !979, the new appraised values are baaed on safes-ratio studies COJ}ducted throughout the county.
The fai r market value of each parcel has been adjusted in line with the results of that study; a nd,
through the use of questionnaires and site visitations.
Although it is generally conceded that the result of
the 1981 reappra isal will be higher property taxes for
most Gallia County landowners, the exact amount a
property owner will pay cannot be determined until
December.
"It's too early to tell." says County Auditor Dorothy
Candee, "reduction factors must be calculated and
(Continued on page 0.1)

The 35 percent tax assessment has not changed. The

county-wide average, some parcels Increased more,
others less, and some decreased in value. The vast
majority, however, did increase. .
Most homeowners wiU find that their appraised
values actually are a bit less than what they consider to
be the true market value or theit. property.
Traditionally, the appraised values of real estate in
Gallia County-and the rest of Ohi()-have been
somewhat less than real fair market value.
Assessed value-which represents 35 percent of ap.
praised value-is what landoWI'lers pay taxes on. Real
estate is thus assessed for taxes at 35 percent of its ap.
praised value. Therefore, a home appraised at $50,000
has a taxable value ol$17 ,500. ·

GALLI POUS- As the end of the second-half tax
coUection season draws near, Gallia County officials are hoping that property .owners are merely
holding onto their money as long as possiblerather, than simply not paying their taxes.
As of Thursday, with sUghUy more than two
weeks left until the July 31 deadline, the county
treasurer's office had collected •257,017 of the $5 . ~
million In property-taxes due.
According to ~urer Frank Mills Jr., this is the
slowest season for payments he has seen during his
tenure in office-a 2f&gt;.year veteran employee of the
treasurer's office-agreed with that observation.
Local utilities, which pay' more-than $3 million of
the $5.5 million second-half tax, are not expected to
tn8ki! theircqptributions l!l .t he COilllb: coffers until
the last i!By of c61lectioils. 'The cdrit 'high interest
rates paid on Investments gives 'an incentive to
large taxpayers to withhold their tax dollars as long
as possible.
Subtracting the amount ilue from the utilities still
leaves nearly million in property taxes to be paid
by individual property owners within the next two

' ~ i ~ ~'~,111~:. }~'j
~ ~.
· ~ern; Mo• (APJ ::... The

HOT WEATHER TO COME AND FOR BACK TO SCHOOL
I
\

o.

Aerial missions continue
LOS GATOS, Calif. (AP) - Officials battling a Mediterranean
fruit fly irifestation added another 25
square miles Thursday to the area
that will be sprayed with a pesticide,
after the aerial missions bogged
down for the third night in a row.
The area heavily irifested with

10 Section s 74 Pages l5 Cents
A Multtmedi~ Inc . Newspaper

Sunday,July 19, 1981

,Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasan1

· Tax payments slow--Mills ·

.

BUY NOW FOR

ttttes -

'

.

BY LARRY EWING
· ~ea-l!entlael Staff
GALLIPOLIS - As a result of the state mandated
111111 reappraisal Qf _poiiperty for tax purposes, the appralsM value of -all' real estate in Gallia County increased·by anaverage of about 43 percent.
?roperty·valioes are established-usually increasedby reappraisal every six years and by less fonnal updates in the third year following reappraisal. By law,
the sill-year reappraisal is supposed to adjust values
aci:ordlng to,fair market values. . :
'· ~ resultS of the reeently com~leted Gallia reappralsalinil{ca~ an average increase since the 1978 update.i~ true ·m arket value of 43 percent-that's just a

When: JULY 19th
Time: 7:00 P.M.
Where: VICTORY

lAWtl _,1110 OM DIN fQ\MtiHNT

ON EVERY
. -- ... FLOOR
. . ...

.

Property value up. 43 percent in Gallia

THE GOSPEL
TONES

.....

IN EVERY .

•

YOU ARE INVIT·ED
TO HEAR

"'Dalp
AWS-CHALMERS

CHECK THE MANY SAVINGS -

:

facllitiea.
.
"Consolldationlllfavorable from a
management standpoint," Morris
says. " We could concentrate funds
In order to solve problemS more
adequately."
The major advantage of
cooperation and consolidation between the city and county is unifor·
rnity, according to Morris.
'

weeks.

SALE PRICE .............!.194900

992-3088.

"There . Ia some duplication in
whatthecityandcounty~rs,"he
says.
County Commissioner Paul Niday
said he would be in favor of con-

1,;:~~·~~~·~·~~a~··~:;;:a~n::;::;::;::;:;;~~~~;;;;:;;~:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~;;;;-

• Smoooh 5-speed transmission - excellent
maneuverability_
Reg . Price
, Varlely of PTO·driven aHachments. $2299. 00

L'

ca'uon

district's board of .•
Is reservlog tbe rlpt_to
reject all blda. AI 18:38 a.m., some Dine JUDk scbool
buses of tbe district wm be aucUoaed oa Aug. 7 al·tbe
bus garage In Rutland.

Judge ends 30 court cases

• Wide 42" cutting width mower oeck.
• Dynam1cally balanceci16· HP owin cylinder engine .

~n.~r.,.;~l.. •l•te.at'lit~act·

'-s

'.

1

...,_.

'f . I
·•
.
•
. , illf ~
MMnei,IUOU, ,'l ~ ~· \qtaa&amp;....auowu .................... . . . ........... .. ·:· ~·
~
~
,
,.
l. -~. A -Mil.. .;..:.
~:!;~
::Sr•!
~~~(~~
tii!J
'
·t '
.
.....
. . Ctllli!e
threat~.
. " f ; ~· ..- . ;\ . ~
c.:J:-1]
' ' =dGUd;yailid· --w.-ICJIIDt'I'OI' ~
Jntbl!lowr
"
~ ~ ·, ' llh•l....,.,. '
·Qiw;.r. · - ·. ~
'·~" TV· ....~
, __ ::..,...
r . l'n"Wh!.... lll . . ... C.tAida
. . •
If . . . . . . . . . . ~...1111\
--~ ~.· ~~ ~ refnsed to,
................... ...... .... . ............. ' •• ' IIIII?'
. t to .· ~ .
_,
I*
• J.
··
' ·
· 1fta111e Dat til llltJ ~ .-.w. ~t thenwittva ~ o:alllnc a
:- : ,

.

t.•· ·

·ELBERFELDS ·, IN POMEROY,

t

l

'"'~i

·

· ·

·

-

l

tq .

1

·

.

• ..,...

f; ·• • • • • ' • • • • . -... • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • , • • • • • • • • • ' • '

·

&lt;:oatt~N., 1111 A-4

•1'

1

•
'

..-

' J. ' 1 .,. ._,. . '1 ·';. 'I ..~

"We would have one agency doing
a Job instead of two or three," he ex;
plains. "Its not as confusing to the
public and we would provide better,
more streamlined service."
Mortis says it would also even.
tually save the city and county
money.
Consolidation would be especially
practicafinGalliaCounty,hesays.
"It should be much easier to accomplish in a smaller conununity
continued on A-4

flte depa\1ments of the city and
county to share some of their

eeonomically

tbal waf..!'
City Manager Cbda Morris agrees
witb the· two county offlclal,s and
sayshe 'M ellfO\II'majorareuwhere
some C~IUDII and consolldltion
could oc:cur: llllllely, in the cenaua
burt!aa, In law i!pforcement, fire
' protection,tmdhea1thcare.
·
He says he would be In favor of
completely COIIIOUdatlng the census
and health depal1menta. He wOuld

.

Outahlncllng uvtnga now
on our "118 SPECIAL"
l•wn trac:ton.

DEPARTMENT -

~ , . • ,.

dream

lolida~ Ill eome •reu "If the job a1ao like Jhe law eriforcement and

COI!kl be dorie more

•

The 1981 reappraisal maze.
AUCl'ION - This dilapidated former cburcb
building on Pearl SL, In Mlddleport, now owned by tbe
Meigs Local School District, will be sold al a public
auction to be beld at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Aug. 7. The

nm.

···h·-a··
Un

Mason resident

1

A..

.

re.llty, Jt may··~.eltabllsh 1011\!'
unlfomj}ty In ~j!tiUiolailt and save
local taxpayersm~. '
.County Commlsaioner James
Saunde.n says some consolidation
betweenthecltyandcountymaybe
"a good eConOmic move in the long

tire county. Many city and county of·
!ices are Contained in the building,
saving money for \)oth governmenta.
Simply a dream? As of now, yes.
Possible in the near · future?
Probably not.
But it is one idea some city and
county ·offici,ls have toyed with to
bring about cooperation and COl}solidation between the two governments.
They say If it ever becomes

'

~-~~H~~~!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~E~'~H~-l

MISSING - Christy Marie
Laudermift, 15, has been missing
from her home at 317 .,_, Mecha nic
St., since Thursday, July 9. She
was last seen about 9:50p.m. and
was wearing a red tube top, blue
jeans and no shoes. Anyone
knowing of her whereabouts Is
asked to contact the Meigs County Sheriff's Department or phone

joca~ In the bull~ serves the en-

.. '1'11 n Sen~ Wrltet
GAilJPOUS - ·The City-county
safety bulllllnl, located-across from
the city building on Second Ave. ad·
·jacenttotbj,countycourthouse,contaJns a jail shared by the city and the
county.
It also eontalns a modem dfspaJ,.
chlrig 81111 communication system
shal1d by the city police and the
sherlff's department.
The centalized fire department

I

Mrs. Paul Shay
Mrs. Paul Shay, 72, 9011
Breezewood Terrace, Apt 102,
Greenbelt, Md ., former Lucille Mees
and fanner Meigs County resident
died Thursday at a hospital in
Maryland.
Mrs. Shay was preceded in death
by her parents, Albert and Gertrude
Smith Mees, one son, Paul Shay, Jr .,
three brothers, Frederick, Gilbert
and Otto and one sister, Phyllis.
She is survived by her husband.
Paul Shay , Jr.; four daughters,
Rosemary, Patricia, Ellen and
Carla; one son, Daniel; one sister,
Mrs . Gertrude Erwin, Gallipolis;
two brothers, Malcolm and Richard
Mces, Pomeroy; 13 grandchildren,
several great grandchildren, and
several nieces a nd nephews.
Funeral serv1ces will be held
Saturday morning at St. Hughes
Catholic Church in Maryland .

(iove~~~:nt un,iJ~.rmi~~ ·officials'

o

the right to privacy was at stake.
But opponents said a system of
ci'OS.Hheclting tho6e who signed up
with the names of young men
enrolled in Social Security was
needed to make the year-old
registration program work.
In a bit of symbolic support to the
ailing U.S. auto industry, the House
voted 231·187 to adopt an amendment that would bar the Pentagon
from buying foreign-made light
trucks, vans and other non-eombat
vehicles unless a suitable U.S.
product was not available. The
measure was introduced by Reps.
Elwood Hillis, R-Ind., and William
Brodhead, O.Mich.

before services at the church.
Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home in Mason today from
6 p.m. until 9 p.m.

Vanessa (Riebel) Chavez, 22, Tucson, Ariz., fonner resident of
Syracuse, died Wednesday at a Tuc·
son hospital following a short illness.
Mrs. Chavez is survived by her
husband, Joseph, a son Joshua, her
parents, Richard and F lorence Cook
Riebel, her grandfather and grandmother, Charles and Edna Reuter
aU of Tucson; several aunts, uncles
and cousins of Gallia and Meigs
County.
She was preceded in death by one
brother.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Bring
Funeral Home, Tucson, with burial
in Tucson Memorial Park.

STOP IN -

. , •_. 'J''J. '41

.

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Discharged-Charles
Nickels,
Lisa Hayes. Ell1s. Donald

~--LJ· ....,t&gt;,'.f'"..;"•t- ~~ ·of')

-' t

'

. natiomrtjle Mke If no aettlement Ia

•

.'• •'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="165">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2755">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="45643">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45642">
              <text>July 17, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7465">
      <name>chavez</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="163">
      <name>gibbs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1443">
      <name>hess</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="130">
      <name>mees</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="303">
      <name>riebel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7466">
      <name>shay</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
